首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Appropriacy in English I. What is appropriacy? A. Factors deciding appropriacy: 1. choice of words 2. the way you say the words
Appropriacy in English I. What is appropriacy? A. Factors deciding appropriacy: 1. choice of words 2. the way you say the words
admin
2012-12-01
34
问题
Appropriacy in English
I. What is appropriacy?
A. Factors deciding appropriacy:
1. choice of words
2. the way you say the words
3.(1)______ (1)______
B. An example: "Shut up!"
1. to a friend
—in a friendly informal way when chatting in a pub: (2)______ (2)______
2. to a Mend
—in a friendly way at a formal dinner: might lead to misinterpretation
3. to a stranger
—under any normal circumstances: (3)______ (3)______
II. Why is appropriacy important:
required to achieved the aim of (4)______ (4)______
III. Appropriacy causes problems for learners because:
A. It is culturally specific
B. It (5)______ (5)______
C. Little tolerance for its absence
D. It is (6)______specific (6)______
E. Difference exists between in spoken and written language.
IV. How can we help learners develop a sensitivity to appropriacy?
A. General strategies
1. teach (7)______ (7)______
2. teach neutral language first
3. practise (8)______ (8)______
B. Strategies to raise sensitivity to recognition
1. listening for inference
2. exploiting (9)______ (9)______
3. watching soundless Videos
C. Strategies to help with appropriate production
1. drilling
2. practising in a variety of contexts
3. including (10)______in spoken practice (10)______
4. writing dialogues
Appropriacy in English
There seems to be a widely held belief that English, in common with the British who speak it, is a very formal language. In my experience, English does not seem any more or less formal than other languages. All cultures seem to have concepts of formality, what can be confusing is that these concepts differ from culture to culture.
What is appropriacy and how is it shown in English?
Basically appropriacy depends upon what you say and how you say it. In other words upon your choice of words and the way you then produce those words, which in spoken language is largely dependent on pronunciation and paralinguistics, or body language.
(1) What you say and how you say it will in turn be governed by the situation and who you are talking to. Bygate used the term "reciprocity conditions" to describe how these features affect language production. (2) An example might be the use of the exclamation "Shut up!". Most of us might tell a friend to "Shut up!" in a friendly informal way when chatting in a pub. We could mean "I don’t believe you." and would probably be laughing and use high pitched falling intonation. If we were not smiling and used rising intonation the message would be very different and inappropriate. We would be less likely to use the same words in a friendly way to the same person at a formal dinner because the other people present might misinterpret our meaning and think we were being rude. We would not tell a stranger or someone we are not on very familiar terms with to "Shut up!" under any normal circumstances. (3) We would of course if we positively wanted to be rude or perhaps if we thought their talking was rude.
Why is appropriacy important?
(4) Brown and Yule suggested that much language use aims at "interaction", by which they mean using language to create, preserve and develop social relationships. If the speaker is not appropriate this aim will not be achieved. Rudeness, deliberate or not, causes social relationships to break down.
What problems do learners have with appropriacy?
What makes this so difficult for a learner of English is that so much of the necessary sensitivity to appropriacy is culturally specific and acquired in childhood. (5) It is also always changing—some examples of what is considered appropriate language now would have been thought completely inappropriate as little as 40 years ago, perhaps even more recently.
In addition, due to the subconscious manner in which this awareness of appropriacy is acquired, native speakers may not make allowances for its absence when non-native speakers speak or write. A good example is the case of intonation where a speaker may be misinterpreted as being rude or bored completely unfairly because their intonation is too flat.
(6) Another cause of problems here can be employing what is acceptable in your L1 when speaking another language. In Spain it is uncommon to say "por favor" (please) when ordering a drink in a bar; so long as you smile, it is unnecessary. This is not the case in the UK. Similarly in Czech I could ask "Nemate chleb?" in a shop but if I directly translated this into "Don’t you have bread?" in Britain, I could be in trouble.
Finally to make things more complex there is the difference between appropriacy in spoken and written language. This distinction exists in most languages as far as I am aware but nevertheless adds further complications. The arrival of texting and email has blurred this distinction to some extent but at the same time has increased the amount of awareness necessary.
Then how can we help learners develop a sensitivity to appropriacy? In the last part of my talk, I will suggest a few ideas for helping students become more sensitive to appropriacy in English, both as producers and receivers of language.
There are some general strategies:
(7) Most of the distinctions between what is and isn’t appropriate can be most easily demonstrated through teaching functional "social" language. When teaching functions be sure to focus on the context in which you would use particular functions and with whom you would use them.
Most learners will be safe and able to function if they can use neutral language appropriately, so I teach this first. For example, "Can you tell me the time, please?" is more generally applicable than "Would you mind telling me the time, please?" or "What’s the time?".
(8) Practise transforming language from formal to neutral to informal etc. My students find this fun and interesting and it is a good way of raising awareness of different possibilities within the same context.
Then, sensitivity to recognition can be trained as follows:
I often ask students to listen and decide "What is the relationship between the speakers?" or "Where are they speaking?" etc. as a first listening task as it makes them aware of the importance of these considerations.
(9) As a post-listening activity, I ask learners to search through tapescripts looking for language that shows the appropriacy of the text.
Besides, I use video with the sound off to raise awareness of paralinguistics clues.
Finally, to help with appropriate production, I often give them the following practice:
Pronunciation is central to appropriacy and so I try to drill good models with differing intonations and stresses.
Very little language is context specific so I give my learners practice using structures / functions / lexis in lots of different situations.
(10) In spoken practice activities I sometimes add on an aspect of different degrees of appropriacy. For example, I give students roles such as "teacher" or "older stranger" or "best friend", which means they will have to use different language depending on who they are talking to.
For a variety of reasons I often ask students to write spoken language. One task I use is to ask groups to write the same dialogue but assign a different degree of appropriacy to each group. The groups then perform their dialogues for the class and the listeners have to guess how appropriate they are being.
Being appropriate, of which politeness is an important but not the only aspect, is central to use of any language. Gaining an understanding of this feature of language use, both as a receiver and producer of language, is fundamental to success. However, as I have tried to show, acquiring this understanding is demanding because this aspect of language is extremely complex, partly because it is so culture and context specific. As teachers the best we can do is to expose learners to a wide variety of language and contexts within which that language can be used.
选项
答案
rude
解析
细节题。但是在通常情况下对一个陌生人说“shut up”就会显得很粗鲁。原文是“We would of course if we positively wanted to be rude or perhaps if we thought their talking was rude.”
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/zaUYFFFM
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
IntroductiontoEnglishSynonymsEnglishhasthelargestvocabularyandthemostsynonymsofalllanguagesintheworld.This
A、TheIraqiarmysupportedthecrimeunit.B、Britishforcekillednoone.C、Engineersdemolishedthebuildingduringtheattack.
WhichofthefollowingisconsideredanAmericanmasterpiece?
Sometimes,twovarietiesofalanguageexistsidebysidethroughoutthecommunity,witheachhavingadefiniteroletoplay.Th
TherenownedAmericanlinguistN.Chomskyinthelate1950’sproposedthedistinctionbetween______.
Patents,saidThomasJefferson,shoulddraw"alinebetweenthethingswhichareworthtothepublictheembarrassmentofanexc
Patents,saidThomasJefferson,shoulddraw"alinebetweenthethingswhichareworthtothepublictheembarrassmentofanexc
WhencatastrophicfloodshitBangladesh,TNT’semergency-responseteamwasready.Thelogisticsgiant,withheadquartersinAmst
推进产业结构优化升级,形成以高新技术产业为先导、基础产业和制造业为支撑、服务业全面发展的产业格局。优先发展信息产业,在经济和社会领域广泛应用信息技术。积极发展对经济增长有突破性重大带动作用的高新技术产业。用高新技术和先进适用技术改造传统产业,大力振兴装
朋友A君,四十余岁,自认为是引导新潮流的电影理论家。实际上成“家”还差那么一丁点。最近著系列小文,专论电影艺术的“物质还原性”。举凡“物质还原性”与吾国电影艺术发展十大关系。因其系列而引起电影理论界注意。何谓电影艺术的“物质还原性”,则未加阐明。更显“十大
随机试题
下列关于公式的表述中,正确的有()。
()属于三类防雷建筑物。
工程施工过程中,对已进场但检验不合格的工程材料,项目监理机构应要求施工单位()。
为使供求机制朝着有利于经济发展的方向起作用,运输市场应是供给略小于需求的卖方市场。()
班会一般有三类,即常规班会、生活班会和主题班会。()
自此而后,除非天资极忠厚、极愚钝者外,中国人大都变成两类:顺世和游世。顺世是游世的预科,不先上预科,去其狂狷之气,是不能_________的,顿悟者终究是少数。游世是顺世之绝顶。是顺得久了,看出门道,终于得道而悟,摇身一变,从此_________不逾游规,
你与小王共同工作。小王顽固地认为他自己的方案是正确的,他提出分别向领导汇报工作的建议,你怎么办?追问:请把考官当作小王,现场模拟一下你如何劝说小王?
Make()copiesofimportantfiles,andstorethemonseparatelocationstoprotectyourinformation.
Java以JVM为墓础,最下层是()。
MyViewonKnowledgeEconomy1.近年来,知识型经济在人们的经济生活中发挥着越来越大的作用2.它产生了哪些影响3.我的看法
最新回复
(
0
)