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Thank you for visiting our blog. This blog contains all notes, videos, slides presentation etcetera based on our topic above. Basically, it is part of our task for this semester and we will post our discussions and views for your reference.

Monday, 5 October 2015

4 Types of Register :)

Register types

Register can be separated into four categories: FAMILIAR, INFORMAL, FORMAL and CEREMONIAL. The following will explain each category and provide a corresponding example.

'Familiar'

This register is normally used between people who know each other well. Features of this register show a lack of grammar, spelling, punctuation and  usually contains slang and jargon.
For example:
Hey,
Will arrive evening. Did not catch bus.
Later
John

'Informal'

Generally journalism and occasionally academic writing use this register. When using an informal register, there is usually a close relationship between the writer, audience and topic with a degree of casualness. However, care must be taken in order not to mistake informal for familiar registers. The features of this register are different from the familiar register as more care is taken with grammar etc. However, the tone is conversational, using colloquial language, compared to the formal register.
For example:
While I was on my way to the Science Lab., a thought struck me that perhaps all that we think is possible, may not be. For example, a  friend and I were contemplating the prospect of dumping our classes and hanging out in our favourite cafĂ© instead. We found that what we thought was possible, actually wasn't as our lecturer intervened on our way, ending up that we attended class anyway. Does this mean that what we originally thought was possible, can't be, as something will always intervene?  How does this affect prediction and planning?

'Formal'

A formal register is neither colloquial nor personal and is the register that is mostly used in academic writing. It is a register where strong opinions can be expressed objectively, it does not break any of the rules of written grammar and often has a set of rules of what not to do when using this register. The following extract is from Crystal's book: A dictionary of linguistics and phonetics (Crystal, 1997).
For example:
Several stages of development have been distinguished in the first year of a child's life when it develops the skills necessary to produce a successful first word. According to Crystal (1997), primitive vocal sounds are displayed within the first two months with basic features of speech such as the ability to control air flow and produce rhythmic utterance. Sounds such ascooing, quieter sounds with a lower pitch and more musical develop between six and eight weeks of age. Cooing dies away around three and four months and then a period called vocal play develops; an experimental stage, where a baby has more control and experiments with vocal practice.

'Ceremonial'

Modern academic writing rarely uses this register. Sometimes, it may be encountered when reading transcripts of speeches or historical documents. Often, misunderstandings in recognizing the difference between ceremonial and formal registers occur when writers are experimenting with new vocabulary. A dictionary will help you make the right choices and reading academic texts will help you become more familiar with the appropriate choices.
For example:
I stand on this rostrum with a sense of deep humility and great pride - humility in the wake of those great architects of our history who have stood here before me, pride in the reflection that this home of legislative debate represents human liberty in the purest form yet devised.

Here are centered the hopes and aspirations and faith of the entire human race.

(General MacArthur's Address to Congress April 19, 1951: Old soldiers never die they just fade away extracted from the American Experience homepage)

What is Discourse Analysis?

How to do Foucauldian Discourse Analysis



Discourse Analysis Genre, Modality, Register & Participants

This video explain how the concepts genre, modality, register, and participant frameworks 
are used in discourse analysis.

Saturday, 3 October 2015

Citation and reference :


Grammar in english. (n.d.). Retrieved from 
http://www.grammarinenglish.com/idiomsphrases/

Connectives - Parts of speech - Knowledge of Language. (n.d.). Retrieved from
http://www.educationscotland.gov.uk/knowledgeoflanguage/english/partsofspeech/connectives/

conversational gambit - Everything2.com. (n.d.). Retrieved from
http://everything2.com/title/conversational+gambit

Lexical chunk | TeachingEnglish | British Council | BBC. (n.d.). Retrieved from
https://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/article/lexical-chunk

Simile - Examples and Definition of Simile. (n.d.). Retrieved from 
http://literarydevices.net/simile/

BBC World Service | Learning English | Learn it. (n.d.). Retrieved from
http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/grammar/learnit/learnitv351.shtml

Learn English - Lexis: Perception 1




Journals and Articles: 

Biber, D., et al. "Lexical bundles." Longman grammar of spoken and written English. London: Longman (1999). 

Sinclair, J. O. H. N. "Contrastive lexical semantics." (1998): 1-24. Hsu, Jeng-yih. "An Analysis of the Multiword Lexical Units in Contemporary ELT Textbooks." Online Submission (2006). 

Esimaje, Alexandra Uzoaku. "A Descriptive Survey of the Character of English Lexis in Sermons." SAGE Open 4.4 (2014): 2158244014563044. 

Esimaje, Alexandra Uzoaku. "Register Variation and the Multi-word Item." Theory and Practice in Language Studies 2.1 (2012): 97-104. 


 Book: 

Javier Ruano-Garcia. Early Modern Northern English Lexis: A Literary Corpus-Based Study
every terms and meanings for every single thing we apply in everyday life has a story or LEGEND behind the grandeur of it's creation. Michel Foucault is the founder of the term discourse. 


What is Lexis?



Lexis is the total word-stock or lexicon that has lexical items rather than lexical meaning (grammar). It has several characteristics such as it is formulaic (it relies on partially fixed expressions and highly probable words combinations), idiomatic (it follows conventions and patterns for usage), metaphoric (concepts such as time and money, business and sex, systems and water all share a large portion of the same vocabulary), grammatical (it uses rules based on sampling of the Lexicon and register-specific (it uses the same word differently and or less frequently in different contexts). 



Types of Lexis


1. Lexical Chunks  

A lexical chunk is a group of words that are commonly found together. Lexical chunks include collocations but these usually just involve content words, not grammar.

Example
In this dialogue there are five possible chunks:
- Did you stay long at the party?
- No, I got out of there as soon as they ran out of food.

Lexical chunks are the common coinage of English. They’re the bread and butter, the everyday and the mundane. They’re the reliable standards around which we can hang poetic and emotive language.
Focusing on lexical chunks is a useful way to look at language and to extend learners' control of it. For example, learners can spend a little time at the end of a reading comprehension exercise identifying chunks in the text and analyzing them, or identifying other contexts they might be found in.




2. Collocation 

Collocations are words that habitually or typically occur together. There are verb + adverb collocations like wave frantically (not wave hecticly). There are adjective + noun collocations like regular exercise (not steady exercise). There are adverb + adjective collocations like completely or wholly satisfied (not utterly satisfied). And there are verb + noun or verb + object collocations like follow someone's example (not pursue someone's example).

Example 
1. the fast train
2. fast food
3. a quick shower
4. a quick meal
5. I took him to the hospital 
6. Take plenty of warm sweaters



3. Idioms

An idiom is a group of two or more words which we have to treat as a unit in learning a language. We cannot arrive at the meaning of the idiom just by adding together the meaning of the words inside it. [to carry out = execute]

Example 
1. A hot potato
2. A penny for your thoughts
3. Actions speak louder than words
4. Add insult to injury
5. An arm and a leg
6. At the drop of a hat


4. Simile

A simile is a figure of speech that makes a comparison, showing similarities between two different things. Unlike a metaphor, a simile draws resemblance with the help of the words “like” or “as”. Therefore, it is a direct comparison. 

We can find simile examples in our daily speech. We often hear comments like “John is as slow as a snail.” Snails are notorious for their slow pace and here the slowness of John is compared to that of a snail. The use of “as” in the example helps to draw the resemblance. Some more examples of common similes are given below.

Examples
Our soldiers are as brave as lions.
Her cheeks are red like a rose.
He is as funny as a monkey.
The water well was as dry as a bone.
He is as cunning as a fox.

5. Connective 


Connectives are sometimes known as conjunctions. The word 'connective' just explains more simply that these words link or connect other words, phrases or clauses.

There are 2 types of connective 


1. Co-coordinating connectives

These link words, phrases or clauses which are of equal importance. These connectives include words such as 'but', 'and','so'. 

2. Subordinating connectives
These link a main clause with a subordinate (or dependent) clause.These connectives include words such as 'if', 'although', 'when', 'while', 'since', 'because'.



6. A Conversational Gambit

A conversational gambit is a opening used to start a conversation with someone you don't know. Often this is called, "chatting up" or maybe "hitting on" someone; but sometimes it's just wanting to talk.

Common conversational gambits are:
Talking about the weather. ("Hot enough for you?")
Talking about sports. ("How 'bout them Cowboys?")
Talking about movies. ("Did you see the new Star Wars movie?")
Talking about jobs. ("So, what do you do?")
Talking about college majors. ("What's your major?")





Visit this slide share for general explanation about Lexical Approach. http://www.slideshare.net/JolexM/the-lexical-approach-10373311?related=2

Lexical Approach


Language Registers Summary

Language Registers (A brief explaination)