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Michael Jackson considering Polish theme park investment
WARSAW — Pop star Michael Jackson and Warsaw mayor signed an outline agreement on the construction of a theme park to be located in one of the suburbs of the capital. The size and final location of the planned development have yet to be released, but Jackson is known to be interested in large sites to the north or south of the city centre. The mayor told a press conference that he was delighted with the decision. " Warsaw needs not only office blocks, but also a leisure centre, " he said, adding that the city authorities would donate the land for the project. During his two-day visit, Jackson visited several potential sites for the planned development. Jackson's plans had been earlier announced by the president of the Polish Agency for Foreign Investment. He noted that while the reports of an 800 hectare site for the park, dubbed by the Polish press " Jacksonland, " were much exaggerated, nevertheless the planned investment could run into the hundreds of millions dollars. The outline agreement allows for the creation °f a family amusement park, with both sides having 12 months to complete the work. The city of Warsaw is obligated to provide an ecological and urbanistic analysis of the planned project, while Jackson is to seek the advice °f firms which have planned similar parks throughout the world. Literary text Gary Lauteis One Christmas Card Coming Up Every year in December we go through what is known as “picture time” at our house. It’s sort of like World War Three but without rules. The tradition started years ago when my wife and I thought it would be a good idea to have a Christmas card featuring our children and dog. It would be folksy, w agreed. And, since we didn’t intend to be explicit aboul the children’s faith, nobody could take religious offense. However, there was one problem: we didn’t have any children or a dog. I was all for renting, but my wife figured it would be cheaper in the long run to have our own. So I wound up having these three kids and a St. Bernard dog (my wife can do anything if she puts her mind to it) on my hands. For 364 days in the year, they cost me money but on the 365th they have their one duty to perform: They pose for our Christmas card. Well, yesterday was it. For some unknown reason we never get the same photographer twice. In fact, last year the one we had never even came back for his hat. All we want is a simple picture of three sweet kids and a 195-pound dog smiling in the Christmas spirit. I can’t think of anything easier than that. But it never quite works out that way. I assembled the cast and converged in the room only to find the floor littered with laundry. “What are the sheets doing all over the bar stools? ” I asked. “They’re supposed to be there, ” my wife replied. “To look like snow, ” my wife explained. “Could you tell I have bar stools covered with sheets? ” “Never in a million years, ” I said. “It looks exactly like snow.” “Should we put the children on a toboggan and have it pulled by the dog? ” my wife asked. “I could bend a coat hanger and make it look like a pair of antlers.” “Sounds swell, ” I encouraged. “You don’t think it looks a little phony, do you? ” she wanted to know. “Don’t be silly. I would never guess that it’s a dog pulling 1 toboggan across the room floor past some bar stools covered with white sheets, ” I said. “If I didn’t know better, I’d swear I was looking in on a scene in the Laurentians.” My wife seemed pleased with that. “Stephen! ” she ordered. “Stop crossing your eyes.” And then she added to me, “Do you think we should dress them like elves? ” I said it was fine by me. “Everything’s fine, just as long as we hurry.” The photographer, meanwhile, was setting up his lights and trying to keep out of reach of the dog, who was going around smelling everybody’s breath to see what they had enjoyed for dinner. “Didn’t you give the dog a tranquilizer? ” I asked. “No, I thought you had, ” my wife said. “He’s just a little excited, ” I explained to the photographer who was trying to get his camera bag out of dog’s mouth without much success. “C’mon, boy. Give LI the bag.” “Jane! Stop punching your brother, ” my wife interrupted. “You’ll make him blink for the picture.” We finally got the camera bag, the kids got tired and our “reindeer” gave a big yawn. “Smile! ” the photographer pleaded. I made faces. My wife waved toys. It was swell except that nothing happened. One of two elves had pulled the floodlight cord out of the wall socket and was trying to screw it into his sister’s ear. There’s no point going into all of the details. Within ninety minutes or so, we had our picture and the photographer gratefully retrieved his camera bag and left. Next year, I think I’ll handle it differently. I’ll mail out the kids and the dog directly and not bother with a photograph. Documentary text 7 May 1978 Turkey Durban, James St/ 22-34 James Hendon PhotographicDealer A meeting of the Board Durban Dear Mr Hendon I notice that since the beginning of last September there have been a number of occasions on which pour current account has been overdrawn. As you know it is not the custom of the bank to allow overdrafts except by special arrangement and usually against security. Two cheques drawn by you have been presented for payment today, one by Insurance Brokers.td for £ 27.50 and one by John Musgrave & Sons for £ 87.10. As you are one of our oldest customers I gave instructions for the cheques to be paid although the balance on your current account, namely £ 56.40, was insufficient to meet them. I am well aware that there is a substantial credit balance on your deposit account If overdraft facilities on your current account are likely to be needed in future, suggest that you give the bank the necessary authority to hold the balance on deposit as overdrawn security. Yours sincerely
Scientific text Specialized Dictionaries England and America have accumulated vast collections of idiomatic or colloquial phrases, proverbs and other, usually image-bearing word-groups with profuse illustrations. But the compilers' approach is in most cases purely empiric. By phraseology many of them mean all forms of linguistic anomalies which transgress the laws of grammar or logic and which are approved by usage. Therefore alongside set-phrases they enter free phrases and even separate words. The choice of items is arbitrary, based on intuition and not on any objective criteria. Different meanings of polysemantic units are not singled out, homonyms are not discriminated, no variant phrases are listed. An Anglo-Russian Phraseological Dictionary by A. V. Koonin published in our country has many advantages over the reference books published abroad-and can be considered the first dictionary of English phraseology proper. To ensure the highest possible cognitive value and quick finding of necessary phrases the dictionary enters phrase variants and structural, synonyms, distinguishes between polysemantic and homonymic phrases, shows word- and form-building abilities of phraseological units and illustrates their use by quotations. New Words dictionaries have it as their aim adequate reflection of the continuous growth of the English language. There are three dictionaries of neologisms for Modern English. Two of these (Berg P. A Dictionary of New Words in English, 1953; Reifer, M. Dictionary of New Words, N. Y., 1955) came out in the middle of the 50s and are somewhat out-of-date. The third (A Dictionary of New English. A Barnhart Dictionary, L., 1973) is more up-to-date. The Barnhart Dictionary of New English covers words, phrases, meanings and abbreviations which came into the vocabulary of the English language during the period 1963—1972. The new items were collected from the reading of over half a million running words from US, British and Canadian sources—newspapers, magazines and books. Dictionaries of slang contain elements from areas of substandard speech such as vulgarisms, jargonisms, taboo words, curse-words, colloquialisms, etc. The most well-known dictionaries of the type are Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English by E. Partridge, Dictionary of the Underworld: British and American, The American Thesaurus of Slang by L. V. Berry & M. Den Bork, The Dictionary of American Slang by H. Wentworth and S. B. Flexner. Usage dictionaries make it their business to pass judgement on usage problems of all kinds, on what is right or wrong. Designed for native speakers they supply much various information on such usage problems as, e.g., the difference in meaning between words like comedy, farce and burlesque, illusion and delusion, formality and formalism, the proper pronunciation of words like foyer, yolk, nonchalant, the plural forms of the nouns flamingo, radix, commander-in-chief, the meaning of such foreign words as quorum, quadroon, quatrocento, and of such archaic words as yon, yclept, and so forth. E. g. A Desk-Book of Idioms and Idiomatic Phrases by F. N. Vizetelly and L. G. De Bekker includes such words as cinematograph, dear, (to) fly, halfbaked, etc. They also explain what is meant by neologisms, archaisms, colloquial and slang words and how one is to handle them, etc. J Offer your variant of translating one of the examples. ¿ Collect data on other stylistic aspects Choose a text of functional variety and analyse it to the plan 1. style, substyle, genre of the text. 2. Structure. Non-verbal elements of the text: Punctuation marks, used for specific purposes. Position on the page, types of print, emphasizing, visual means (photographs, pictures, cartoons, color emphasizing), their structural and expressive function. Formal elements of the genre-organizing character (column theme, title, subtitle etc.), content structure of the text, paragraph organization. 3. Linguistic peculiarities. Phonetic level: The choice of vowels and consonants, peculiar use of certain sound characteristics (devoicing, sonorant character etc.). Rhythmic character of the text. Phonetic irregularities used to render the impression of spoken speech. Lexical level: Stylistic levels and groups of vocabulary, used in the text for informational and expressive effect. Peculiar use of international words, terms, topical groups, proper names. Morphemic level: The choice of speech parts, certain grammatical forms, used for expressive character. Syntactic level: Syntactic structure of the text. Peculiar choice of syntactic constructions and sentence types used for economical and expressive effect. Stylistic devices: The use of stylistic devises of phonetical, lexical, syntactic groups.
² Unit 8 Text theory & Read information on the topic A text is a complicated structure that depends on it’s environment. It can be represented as relations between READER, WRITER, REALITY and TEXT: READER D REALITY (% TEXT '& WRITER First of all it is determined by the purpose of writing. Unlike the expository writer, the creative writer uses language plastically, for its suggestiveness and power of sensuous evocation. Only by means of words can the writer persuade a person of the truth in what he says or make anyone care about it. The art of writing begins in the senses and is accomplished with words. When the text is successful, it communicates insight to the reader. Images are important means of making reader react. By pure intelligence author can outargue a reader and convince him, but his intelligence must be supplemented by imagery. The writer is is bound to things of experience. He can express them in concepts or in formulated patterns of thought or in images and imitations. He is concerned with people, places, actions, feelings. Stylistic value of the text is connected with the use of a figure of speech. Sometimes direct and scrupulously accurate reporting can be as vivid as any figure of speech. Nothing is so likely to hinder the freedom of expression so essential to true creative writing as a too-strict adherence to “correctness.” In the text every word is a symbol. That kind of extension of meaning, which is called subcontext, is actually one of the most suggestive and economical ways of communicating the aesthetic experience. The writer of fiction, however he may pretend to be indifferent and invisible, is always there. In informative texts he is really invisible. " Make practical stylistic tasks Read examples of sentences where contextual meaning depends on phraseological or syntactic fixation Paraphrase each of the following sentences. 1. He was used to getting up early. He used to get up early. 2. After an exhausting search they found the missing children. After an exhaustive search they found the missing children. 3. I have made few friends, but I enjoy living here. I have made a few friends, so I enjoy living here. 4. I have heard nothing of him for a very long time. I have heard nothing from him for a very long time. 5. I regret to say that you'll be held responsible. I regret saying that you'll be held responsible. 6. Did you read his last great novel? Did you read his great last novel? 7. She didn't marry just because he was rich. She didn't marry just because he was rich. 8. She saved him a seat. She saved him a phone call. 9. Did you remember to look for the book? Do you remember looking for the book? 10.John stopped to explain about his illness. John stopped explaining about his illness. 1 l.The driver forgot to put gas in the car. The driver forgot putting gas in the car. 12.1 regret to say that you'll be held responsible. I regret saying that you'll be held responsible. 13. Did you know that John has agreed? Do you know whether John has agreed? 14. Has he told you that they passed the exam? Has he told you whether they passed the exam'.' 15.1 don't doubt that he will cooperate. I doubt whether he will cooperate. 16.The rebels' defeat of the army was an exciting event. The rebels' defeat by the army was an exciting event. 17.The young man's discovery was never even mentioned. The discovery of the young man was never even mentioned. 18.The Americans who are patriotic tend to be conservative. The Americans, who are patriotic, tend to be conservative. " Make practical stylistic tasks Read examples of sentences where contextual meaning depends on syntactic complication Answer the questions below each sentence: 1. Not infrequently we go to Prague in the autumn. Do we often go there in the autumn? 2. It is not unlikely that we will go there again this October. Is there a good chance that we'll be going there in October? 3. It is no' unthinkable that there should be a 3rd World War. Is this a ridiculous idea? 4. He thinks nothing of checking his answers again and again. Does he mind checking his answers? 5. Nor is it only his own answers that he checks. What else does he do? 6. It is not impossible that the experiment will fail. The speaker is_telling the person he is addressing that the experiments ______ (modal verb)? 7. Geology is by no means without practical importance. The speaker is aware that some people, including the person he is addressing, may have the idea that geology? 8. Her behavior makes her all but indistinguishable from a native Italian. How does she behave? 9. It is not unknown for him to be less than punctual. Is he ever late? " Make practical stylistic tasks Read examples of sentences explain the implied information. 1 By his choice of words, his choice of language, a writer often implies more than is actually printed on the page. What is the meaning implied by each of the following quotations? 1. Women's intuition is the result of millions of years of not thinking. (Rupert Hughes). 2. Whatever women do, they must do twice as well as men to be thought half as good. Luckily that is not difficult. (Charlotte Whitton, Mayor of Ottawa). 3. I am glad that 1 am not a man as I should then be obliged to marry a woman. (Madame de Stael). 4. Women are most fascinating between the ages of 35 and 40. after they have won a few races and know how to pace themselves. Since few women ever pass 40, maximum fascination can continue indefinitely. (Christian Dior). 5. There must be some women who are not liars. (W. Somerset Maugham) 6. Women are like gods. They have one face for their worshippers and one for their rivals, (source unknown) J Offer your variant of translating the sentences Pay attention to preserving he meaning.
" Make practical stylistic tasks Read an extract from PETER PAN, watch the film HOOK and find means of intertext. Come Away, Come Away!
FOR a moment after Mr and Mrs Darling left the house the night-lights by the beds of the three children continued to burn clearly.They were awfully nice little night-lights, and one cannot help wishing that they could have kept awake to see Peter; but Wendy's light blinked and gave such a yawn that the other two yawned also, and before they could close their mouths all the three went out. There was another light in the room now, a thousand times brighter than the night-lights, and in the time we have taken to say this, it has been in all the drawers in the nursery, looking for Peter's shadow, rummaged the wardrobe and turned every pocket inside out. It was not really a light; it made this light by flashing about so quickly, but when it came to rest for a second you saw it was a fairy, no longer than your hand, but still growing. It was a girl called Tinker Bell exquisitely gowned in a skeleton leaf, cut low and square, through which her figure could be seen to the best advantage. She was slightly inclined to embonpoint. A moment after the fairy's entrance the window was blown open by the breathing of the little stars, and Peter dropped in. He had carried Tinker Bell part of the way, and his hand was still messy with the fairy dust. 'Tinker Bell, ' he called softly, after making sure that the children were asleep, 'Tink, where are you? ' She was in a jug for the moment, and liking it extremely; she had never been in a jug before. ' ' 'Oh, do come out of that jug, and tell me, do you know where they put my shadow? ' The loveliest tinkle as of golden bells answered him'. It is the fairy language. You ordinary children can never hear it, but if you were to hear it you would know that you had heard it once before. Tink said that the shadow was in the big box. She meant the chest of drawers, and Peter jumped at the drawers, scattering their contents to the floor with both hands, as kings toss ha'pence to the crowd. In a moment he had recovered his shadow, and in his delight he forgot that he had shut Tinker Bell up in the drawer. If he thought at all, but I don't believe he ever thought, it was that he and his shadow, when brought near each other, would join like drops of water; and when they did not he was appalled. He tried to stick it on with soap from the bath-room, but that also failed. A shudder passed through Peter, and he sat on the floor and cried. His sobs woke, Wendy, and she sat up in bed. She was not alarmed to see a stranger crying on the nursery floor; she was only pleasantly interested. 'Boy, ' she said courteously, 'why are you crying? ' Peter could be exceedingly polite also, having learned the grand manner at fairy ceremonies, and he rose and bowed to her beautifully. She was much pleased, and bowed beautifully to him from the bed. 'What's you name?, ' he asked 'Wendy Moira Angela Darling, ' she replied with some satisfaction. " What's your name? ' 'Peter Pan.' She was already sure that he must be Peter, but it did seem a comparatively short name. 'Is that all? ' 'Yes, ' he said rather sharply: He felt for the first time that it was a shortish name. 'I'm so sorry, ' said Wendy Moira Angela. 'It doesn't matter' Peter gulped. She asked where he lived. 'Second to the right, ' said Peter 'and then straight on till morning.' 'What a funny address! ' Peter had a sinking. For the first time he felt that perhaps it was a funnv address. 'No, it isn't, ' he said. 'I mean, ' Wendy said nicely, Remembering that she was hostess, 'is that what they put on the letters' He wished she had 'hot mentioned letters., 'Don't get any letters, ' he said contemptuously. 'But your mother' gets letters? ' 'Don't have a mother, ' he said., Not only had he no mother, but he had not the slightest desire to have one. He thought them very over-rated persons. Wendy, however, felt at once that she was in the presence of a tragedy. 'O Peter, no wonder you were crying, ' she said, and got out of bed and ran to him. 'I wasn't crying about mothers, ' he said rather indignantly. I was crying because I can't get my shadow to stick on. Besides, I wasn't crying.' 'It has come off? '.
" Make practical stylistic tasks In what way expressiveness is realized in the text by James Joyce?
She raises her arms in an effort to hook at the nape of her neck a gown of black veiling. She cannot: no, she cannot. She moves backwards towards me mutely. I raise my arms to help her: her arms fall. I hold the websoft edges of her gown and drawing them out to hook them I see through the opening of the black veil her lithe body sheathed in an orange shift. It slips its ribbons of moorings * at her shoulders and falls slowly: a lithe smooth naked body shimmering with silvery scales. It slips slowly over the slender buttocks of smooth polished silver and over their furrow, a tarnished silver shadow…_
Fingers, cold and calm and moving..... A touch, a touch.
Small witless helpless and thin breath. But bend and hear a voice. A sparrow under the wheels of Juggernaut, * shaking shaker of the earth* Please, mister God, big mister God! Goodbye, big world!....... Aber das ist eine Schwcinerei!
Great bows on her slim bronze shoes: spurs of a pampered fowl. The lady goes apace, apace, apace..... Pure air on the upland road. Trieste is waking rawly: raw sunlight over its huddled browntiled roofs, testudoform: a multitude of prostrate bugs.Avail a national deliverance Belluomo rises from the bed of his wife's lover's wife: the busy housewife is astir, sloe-eyed, a saucer of acetic acid in her hand..... Pure air and silence on the upland road: and hoofs A girl on horseback. Hedda! Hedda Gabler! " Make practical stylistic tasks Compare two texts, find features of a primary text in the secondary one
" Make practical stylistic tasks Which topic sentence do you prefer in each of the following groups of three? Tell why you prefer that sentence to the other two. Be prepared to present your reasons in class.
" Make practical stylistic tasks In each paragraph find the occurseme - sentence that is unrelated to the main idea. START A STAMP COLLECTION If you want to collect stamps, the best way to start is by getting yourself organized. You should first learn about the kinds of stamps, and then you must decide what sort of collection you wish to have. There are various possibilities—for instance, collecting a certain kind of stamp or specializing in the stamps of one country. Next you should become familiar with the different terms in stamp collecting. The definitions can be found in the library. I like to use the Washington Street public library, where I get excellent help because my cousin is a librarian. After you know about the kinds of stamps and the terminology of stamp collecting, you should begin to practice the care of stamps. For this you will also need to buy equipment: a magnifying glass, stamp tongs, hinges, and an album to start, These steps will get you started on an informative and interesting hobby. A POPULAR SPORT A game worth learning about is a popular American sport now known as softball. In 1888 it was known as indoor baseball, for it was originally invented to be played indoors and was closely related to baseball. In spite of its name, the softball itself is not very soft. The ball is larger, however, than the one used in baseball. Other differences from baseball are that the ball is pitched underhand, the infield is smaller, and the length of the game is seven innings instead of nine. At one time ten players were on a team, but today a team has nine players. That differs from football, in which the regulation number of players is eleven. If learning these facts about softball has interested you, why not get more knowledge by going out and playing the game? THE HOUSE OF FRAGRANCE Come into my house and enjoy the pleasant smells in all the rooms. Start with the living room where flowering plants crowd around the wicker chairs, and spread their fragrance everywhere. At various times there may be the scent of gardenias, narcissus, hyacinths, heliotrope, and jasmine. Then move into the family room and notice the sweet, fruity smell of my father’s pipe tobacco always lingering in the air. As you can imagine, we often talk with Dad about his smoking habit because of the danger to his health. From the family room pass on into the kitchen, where in the mornings the smell of sizzling bacon fills the air. If it is in the afternoon or evening, the kitchen will be taken over by the smell of sauces on the roast or in the stew. After that go upstairs and poke your head into each of the two bedrooms. There perfume bottles release their vapors, resembling incense in one room and violets in the other. I hope you have enjoyed this tour of scents. " Make practical stylistic tasks Choose three of the following topics or others you prefer, and write a good topic sentence (Dicteme) for each. Why I like rock music Making money Nuisances The car I want An unusual ride Surfing CB radio Choosing clothes Getting along with others Handling animals " Make practical stylistic tasks Which concluding sentence do you like best in each of the following ten groups? Tell why you prefer that sentence to the other two. Be prepared to present your reasons in class.
¿ Collect data on other stylistic aspects Choose a literary text to your liking and on the basis of it find realization of text categories: § Cohesion § Coherence § Expressiveness § Informativeness
² Unit 9 Practical stylistics & Read information on the topic The secret of good style A lot of thick textbooks are devoted to recommending steps for successful stylistics/ The most frequently mentioned are the following: 1. Choose a suitable design and hold to it. 2. Use the active voice. The active voice is usually more direct and vigorous than the passive: 3. Put statements in positive form. Use definite, specific, concrete language. Prefer the specific to the general, the definite to the vigiie, the concrete to the abstract. 4. Omit needless words. Vigorous writing is concise. 5. Avoid a succession of loose sentences. - 6. Keep related words together. 7. In summaries, keep to one tense. 8. Place yourself in the background. ‘ 9. Work from a suitable design. 10. Write with nouns and verbs. 11. Revise and rewrite. 12. Do not overwrite. 13. Do not overstate. 14. Avoid the use of qualifiers. 9. Do not affect a breezy manner. 15. Use orthodox spelling. 16. Do not explain too much. 12. Do not construct awkward adverbs. 17. Make sure the reader knows who is speaking. 18. Avoid fancy words. 19. Do not inject opinion. 20. Use figures of speech sparingly. 21. Do not take shortcuts at the cost of clarity. 22. Avoid foreign languages. 23. Prefer the standard to the offbeat.
" Make practical stylistic tasks Proofread, Edit, and Revise This is the final stage of the process. Before turning in these advertisements, make sure that you have " dotted all the i's and crossed all the t's."
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" Make practical stylistic tasks Proofread, Edit, and Revise translation
¿ Collect data on other stylistic aspects Taking the following text as an example make your own recommendations on writing an article, a letter, a report – and what not! Популярное: |
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