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REFERINłE GRAMATICALE Grammar Reference Authors: Dora LOGHIN ; Cristina FELEA Scurt Istoric privind Limba engleză – inflecŃii şi vocabular Historical Sketch of the English Language – Inflections and Vocabulary Engleza este o limbă de origine vest-germanică înrudită cu olandeza, frisiana şi germana, avand, însă şi multe elemente de vocabular din limbile franceză, latină sau grecă, dar şi din alte limbi. Engleza a evoluat pornind de la limbile de origine germanică ce au fost aduse pe teritoriul Marii Britanii în raidurile lor de cucerire de către triburi migratoare cum ar fi Anglii, Saxonii, IuŃii, etc, care sunt cunoscute împreună sub numele de Anglo-Saxoni sau popoare engleze străvechi. Engleza veche (Old English) deja se întrezărea la orizont încă din zorii secolului 8 După Cristos. Azi, cam 341 milioane de persoane vorbesc engleza ca limbă maternă şi încă aproximativ 267 milioane o folosesc limbă a doua în cadrul a peste 104 Ńări – inclusiv Marea Britanie, Irlanda, SUA, Canada, Australia, Noua Zeelandă, Africa de Sud, Samoa Americană, Andorra, Anguilla, Antigua şi Barbuda, Aruba, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Botswana, Teritoriul Britanic din Oceanul Indian, Insulele Britanice Virgine, Brunei, Camerun, Canada, Insulele Cayman, Cook precum şi Danemarca. Limba engleză este folosită pe glob de 750 milioane locuitori, fie ca limbă oficială a unei naŃiuni, fie împreună cu alte limbi (pidgin şi creola). Este una dintre limbile - sau chiar limba - oficiale pe teritoriul Marii Britanii, în Canada, Australia, şi Noua Zeelandă; în Statele Unite nu există o limbă oficială. Larga răspândire a englezei la scară mondială în diplomaŃie, comerŃ şi ştiinŃă, îi certifică importanŃa din acest punct de vedere şi ne ajută să înŃelegem de ce miliarde de persoane o preferă altor limbi şi uneori optează pentru a şi-o însuşi ca limbă a doua. Nu superioritatea sa intrinsecă în raport cu alte limbi a facut ca engleza să devină principala limbă vorbită pe glob. BogăŃia vocabularului, o mare flexibilitate a gramaticii şi faptul că e mai expresivă decât sunt alte limbi (unii pun cel puŃin ultimele două aspecte sub semnul întrebării), sunt calităŃi care reprezintă, de fapt, rezultatul şi nu motivele sau cauzele importanŃei acestei limbi pe glob. ImportanŃa unei limbi este dată de importanŃa utilizatorilor săi şi felul în care aceştia o folosesc. Începând cu secolul al 18-lea, vorbitorii de limbă 1 engleză – mai întâi cei de pe teritoriul insulelor britanice şi mai târziu cei din America şi din dominioanele britanice – au exercitat o influenŃă considerabilă asupra fenomenului de expansiune colonială, a progresului industrial şi technologic, precum Ńi asupra politicii mondiale. Locul pe care engleza îl ocupă în lume este rezultatul direct al istoriei oamenilor care o vorbesc. Clasificarea limbilor În cadrul istoriei limbii şi a popoarelor Indo-Europene, engleza este clasificată printer limbile Vest- Germanice de Jos. Istoria timpurie a limbilor Germanice se bazează pe o reconstituire a limbii Proto-Germanice, care între timp a evoluat şi a dus la formarea limbilor Germană, Engleză, Olandeză, Afrikaans, Yidiş şi a limbilor scandinave. Limbile Germanice Subgrupa limbilor Germanice prezintă multe diferenŃe în raport cu alte limbi de origine IndoEuropeană. 1. Legea lui Grimm(sau Prima Mutatie a Sunetelor) explică modificările consonantice care sau produs în cadrul limbii sub forma în care s-a prezentat aceasta începând cu etapa ProtroIndo-Europeană până la etapa ei Germanică. a. Oclusivele aspirate sonore au devenit oclusive neaspirate sonore (bh, dh, g s-au transformat in b, d, g) b. Oclusivele sonore au devenit oclusive mute (B, d, g au devenit p, t, k) c. Oclusivele mute au devenit fricative mute (P, t, k au devenit f, θ, x (h)) Legea lui Verner explică alte excepŃii care nu apar menŃionate Ńn cadrul Legeii lui Grimm. 2. Sistemul verbal bi-temporal: desinenŃa de Past Tense (-ed) şi una de Present Tense (-s) (fără a se recurge la prezenŃa verbelor auxiliare) 3. Past Tense neaccentuat: pentru exprimarea sa se folosea un sufix dental sau alveolar ( -ed în 2 engleză,-te în germană, sau -de în suedeză) 4. Adjective tari şi slabe: fiecare adjectiv avea o formă diferită in funcŃie de faptul că era precedat sau nu de un determinant. 5. Accent fix: pe prima silabă. 6. MutaŃii vocalice (Proto Germanică) o scurt la a scurt (în latină: hortus, în engleză: garden) a lung la o lung (în latină: mater, în engleza veche: modor) 7. vocabularul comun: au apărut cuvinte care nu au mai existat pana atunci în vocabular, cum ar fi termeni nautici (maritimi). Altele ar fi: rain, earth, loaf, wife, meat si fowl. Perioada Englezei Vechi sau Perioada Anglo-Saxona (449-1066 A.D.) s-a numit Perioda InflecŃiilor Intregi. Period cuprinsa intre1200 si 1500 A.D. s-a numit Perioada Englezei Medii, sau Perioada InflecŃiilor Uniforme, iar perioada Englezei Moderne începe aproximativ în 1500A.D. şi s-a numit , destul de impropriu, Perioada InflecŃiilor Pierdute. În Perioada Modernă s-au manifestat aceleaşi tendinŃe la fel ca şi în celelalte doua perioade, însă de semnalat este faptul ca într-adevăr schimbări mari şi rapide care au avut loc în această ultimă perioadă s-au datorat apariŃiei tiparului şi a răspândirii educaŃiei. Modificările cele mai importante din perioada Englezei Moderne sunt: ‘s este semnul cazului Genitiv Though, thee, thy, thine şi ye au devenit forme arhaice, iar vechea formă de Acuzativ, youm, este folosită acum ca formă de Nominativ şi Acuzativ singular şi plural pentru Pronoumele Personal, persoane II plural. NegaŃia dublă nu se mai utilzează pentru accentuarea unei forme negative. Modul Subjonctiv este acum rar folosit, spre deosebire deconstrucŃiile cu Acuzativul şi cu Infinitivul, care sunt acum foarte utilizate. Be este folosit în loc de Have doar în cazul verbelor Intranzitive de Mişcare sau de Schimbare a stării. 3 Elemente referitoare la vocabularul limbii engleze Evenimentul care a avut un impact covârşitor asupra limbii engleze, atât în privinŃa gramaticii cât şi a stocului de cuvinte, adică a vocabularului acesteia, a fost Cucerirea Normandă. Odată cu acest moment, tendinŃa formării de cuvinte exclusiv din surse pur englezeşti a luat sfârşit, de acum încolo recurgându-se la împrumutul de cuvinte, ca o metodă de adaptare la noile realităŃi socio-istorice. Pentru a exprima noile aspecte socio-umane, engleza apela la ajutor din partea altor limbi, în vocabularul cărora conceptele respective existau deja. Acest proces-procedeu a avut atât avantajele cât şi dezavantaje. Multe cuvinte provenite din tezaurul lingvistic din perioada Englezei Vechi au fost eliminate, lor substitutindu-li-se cuvintele nou-preluate – de ex. ‘inwit’ a fost înlocuit cu ‘conscience’, (cp.’the ayenbite of inwit’ devine ‘remorse of conscience’), ‘rime-craft’ cu ‘arithmetic’, ‘wanhope’ cu ‘despair’. Multe astfel de cuvinte nou-sosite în limbă nu au supravietuit, însă câştigul a depăşit pierderile, iar drept urmare, engleza a fost descrisă ca fiind ‘cea mai completă limbă vorbită vreodată pe pământ.’Totuşi, engleza nu şi-a pierdut niciodată identitatea. În ciuda copleşitoarei preponderente a elementului străin, de împrumut, mai ales din limba latină, engleza este fără tăgadă o limbă de extracŃie teutonică indiferent din ce punct de vedere am privi-o, ca limbă vorbită sau ca idiom scris. Toate inflecŃiile sale gramaticale, şi părŃile sale de vorbire active, cum ar fi pronumele, adjectivele si adverbele pronominale, prepoziŃiile şi conjuncŃiile sunt pur englezeşti. Toate cuvintele, chiar şi cele mai banale, sunt, în general, englezeşti, iar la scrierea unei cărŃi, chiar şi autorii cei mai atraşi de ‘cuvinte mari, nu pot să nu recurgă la stocul majoritar de cuvinte, care, fără doar şi poate, sunt englezeşti. În Biblie, spre exemplu, din 100 de cuvinte, 97 sunt englezeşti - chiar şi în scrierile lui Milton, raportul e de 80 la100. În scrierile în proză, raportul e de 60/100, 30 latine, 5 greceşti şi 5 provenite din alte limbi. De la pătrunderea în engleză a atâtor elemente străine, s-a ajuns la o suprapunere destul de masivă vocabularului celor două limbi, ceea ce a dus la abundenŃa acestei limbi în sinonime. English is a West Germanic language related to Dutch, Frisian and German with a significant amount of vocabulary from French, Latin, Greek and many other languages. 4 English evolved from the Germanic languages brought to Britain by the Angles, Saxons, Jutes and other Germanic tribes, which are known collectively as Anglo-Saxon or Old English. Old English began to appear in writing during the early 8th century AD. Approximately 341 million people speak English as a native language and a further 267 million speak it as a second language in over 104 countries including the UK, Ireland, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, American Samoa, Andorra, Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Botswana, British Indian Ocean Territory, British Virgin Islands, Brunei, Cameroon, Canada, Cayman Islands, Cook Islands and Denmark. The English language is spoken by 750 million people in the world as either the official language of a nation, a second language, or in a mixture with other languages (such as pidgins and creoles.) English is the (or an) official language in England, Canada, Australia and New Zealand; however, the United States has no official language. If we are to ask what are the world’s most widely spoken languages we get a rather complicated answer. Estimates of how many people speak a language are quite general and can vary considerably. For example, English estimates vary from 275 to 450 million, Spanish from 150 to over 300 million, Hindi from 150 to 350 million, and Russian from 150 to 180 million. The worldwide use of English in diplomacy, commerce, and science is evidence of its importance in this regard, and serves to explain why many millions around the world find it desirable and sometimes necessary to learn it as a second language. It is not the intrinsic superiority of English over other languages that has made it the premier world language. If it is richer in vocabulary, more flexible in grammar and more expressive than other languages (and some would question at least the last two of these claims), these qualities are the results, not the causes, of its importance in the world. Simply stated, what makes a language important is the importance of the people who use it and the use to which they put it. Since the eighteenth century, speakers of English – at first from the British Isles and later from America and the dominions – have played an important role in colonial expansion, industrial and technological development, and the world politics. Classification of language families The position of English in the world is the direct result of the history of those who speak it. 5 The history of Indo-European language and people classifies English genetically as a Low West Germanic language of the Indo-European family of languages. The early history of the Germanic languages is based on reconstruction of a Proto-Germanic language that evolved into German, English, Dutch, Afrikaans, Yiddish, and the Scandinavian languages. Germanic Languages The subgroup of Germanic languages contains many differences that set them apart from the other Indo-European languages. 1. Grimm’s Law (or the First Sound Shift) helps to explain the consonant changes from Protro-Indo-Europen to Germanic. a. Aspirated voiced stops became Unaspirated voiced stops (bh, dh, gh became b, d, g) b. Voiced stops became Voiceless stops (B, d, g became p, t, k) c. Voiceless stops became Voiceless fricatives (P, t, k became f, θ, x (h)) Verner’s Law explains other exceptions that Grimm’s law does not include. 2. Two Tense Verbal System: There is a past tense marker (-ed) and a present tense marker (s) on the verb (without using auxiliary verbs.) 3. Weak Past Tense: Used a dental or alveolar suffix to express the past (such as -ed in English,-te in German, or -de in Swedish.) 4. Weak and Strong Adjectives: Each adjective had a different form whether it was preceded by a determiner or no determiner. 5. Fixed Stress: The stress of words was fixed on the first syllable. 6. Vowel Changes (Proto Germanic) Short o to short a (Latin: hortus, English: garden) Long a to long o (Latin: mater, OE: modor) 7. Common Vocabulary: Words developed that hadn't been used before, such as nautical terms (sea). Others include rain, earth, loaf, wife, meat and fowl. The Old English or Anglo-Saxon Period (449-1066 A.D.) has been called the Period of Full Inflection. The period from 1200-1500 A.D. has been called the Middle English Period, or the Period of Levelled Inflections, and the period of Modern English begins about the year 1500A.D., and has been called, not quite adequately, the Period of Lost Inflections. 6 The same tendencies have operated in the Modern Period as in the other two, but a check to great and rapid changes in this last period has been given by the Invention of Printing and the spread of education. The chief changes in the Modern English are: ‘s is used as sign of the Genitive case. Though, thee, thy, thine and ye have become obsolete, and youm the old Accusative, is used as Nominative and Accusative singular and plural of the 2nd Peronal Pronoun. Double negatives are no longer used to strengthen a negative. The Subjunctive is very little used. The Accusative and Infinitive construction is greatly extended in use. Be is used for Have only with Intransitive Verbs of Motion or Change of State. Vocabulary The Norman Conquest had almost as great an influence on the Vocabulary of English as on its Grammar. It gave a definite check to the tendency to form new words from purely English sources, and introduced the habit of borrowing words to denote new needs from languages where they existed already. This process ha caused loss as well as gain. Many Old English words have been driven out by the new-comers – e.g. ‘inwit’ by ‘conscience’, (cp.’the ayenbite of inwit’ becomes ‘remorse of conscience’), ‘rime-craft’ by ‘arithmetic’, ‘wanhope’ by ‘despair’. Many new-comers themselves have failed to survive. But the gains greatly exceed the losses, and the result has been described as ‘the most complete language spoken by man.’ English, however, has not lost its individuality. In spite of the overwhelming preponderence of foreign, especially Latin, words in its vocabulary, English, as spoken, or written, is thoroughly a Teutonic language. All the Grammatical Inflections, and the working parts of speech, such as pronouns, pronominal adjectives and adverbs, prepositions, and conjunctions are purely English. All the commonest, shortest, and most graphic words are generally English, and in writing a book even those fondest of using big words cannot avoid using a majority of English words. For instance in the Bible out of every 100 words 97 are English, and even in Milton there are 80. In ordinary prose probably about 60 would be English, 30 Latin, 5 Greek, and 5 from other languages. 7 From the intrusion of so many foreign elements into English there has resulted a good deal of overlapping of vocabulary, and English is therefore rich in synonyms. A. Prefixe: Prefixes Prefixele sunt fie: a) de origine teutonică, anglo-saxonă, ori engleză sau, b) clasică sau romanică. Grupa limbilor clasice sau romanice include toate limbile moderne ce provin din latină, inclusiv latina şi greaca. Prefixes are either: a) of Teutonic, Anglo-Saxon, or English origin or, b) of Classical or Romance origin. Classical or Romance includes all modern langiages derived from Latin, as well as Latin and Greek. I. Prefixe anglo-saxone Anglo- Saxon prefixes a-, al-, afte-r, be-, by-, for(e)-, gain-, in-, mis-, n-, on-, out-, off-, over-, to-, un-, under-, up-, with-. a- = on : ashore, afoot al- = all : almost, always, alone be- = verbal prefix : to befriend, to become by- = aside, near : by-path, by-stander for- = very (when it is an intensive) or against (when it is a negative particle) : forgive, forbid, forswear, for(e)go, gain- = against: gainsay (= oppose, contradict, argue with, refute, deny) in- = (im, em, en) in, with adjectives = to make : income, imbed, inlay, embitter, enrich mis- = wrong : mislead, mistake. n- = not : never, n-one on- = onwards, ongoing, onrush, onset out- = outcome, outcry, off- = offspring, offset 8 over- = oversea, overdo, overturn, oversee to- = the, or asunder : today, tomorrow, un- = not, back, or the opposite : unbelief, unroll, undo under- = underfeed, underdone, underwood up- = upturn, upheave, upland with- = against, away from, withstand, withhold, withdraw a. Prefixe clasice sau romanice Classical or Romance prefixes Aici intră majoritatea prepozitiilor de origine latină sau de origine greacă. These include most of the Latin and Greek prepositions. b. Prefixe latine Latin prefixes a-,ab-,abs-, ad-, etc = away from : avert abhor, absent, advance, ascend, accept, affirm, aggressor, ally, annex, apply, arrive, assign attend ambi- = on both sides, round : ambiguous, ambition ante- or anti- = before : antecedent, anticipate bi- = two : biscuit, biped circum- = round : circumvent, circuit cum- = together, with : compregend, coequal, collect, contact, corrupt contra- = against : contradict, controversy, countersign de- = down, from, away : descend, devious, decay dis- = away from, asunder : distant, dissect, differ, delay ex- = out of : except, event, evidence, effect extra- = beyond : extraordinary, extraneous in- = invite, import, irrupt, embrace, encourage in- = not + adj. : intact, ignore, illegible, improper, irregular, inter- = within : introduce, intromit mis- = wrong, minus : mischance, mischief non- = not: nonsense 9 ob- = against, away, upon : omit, obvious, occur, offer, oppress, ostensible per- = through : perceive, perfect, perlucid post- = after : postscript, p.m. prae- = before : precede, pretend, prevent pro- = before, for, instead of : provident, pronoun, pollute, porten, puchase, pusue re- = back, again : reduce, receive, redeem retro- = backwards : retrograde, retrospect semi-,sub-, super-, trans-, ultra-, vice- = in place of : viceroy c. Prefixe greceşti: Greek prefixes amphi- = on both sides : amphitheatre, amphibious a- or an- = not : atheist, apathy, anarchy, anonymous ana- = up, back : analyst, anatomy, anaphora anti-, ant- = against : antipathy, Antarctic apo- = from, back : apostrophe, apocalypse, apohorism cata- = down : catastrophe, catalogue, dia- = through : diameter, dialogue ec- or ex- = out of : ecstasy, eccentric en- = in : energy, emphasis, ellipse epi- = on : epitaph, epigram hyper- = over, above : hyperbole, hypermetrical hypo- = under : hypotheses meta- = change : metaphor, method para- = alongside , contrary to : parallel, paradox peri- = around : permeter, periphery, period pro- = before : prolongue, programme syn- = together with : syb=ntax, syllable, sympathy, system 10 B. Sufixe Suffixes Când un sufix care conŃine o vocală scurtă este alipit unei rădăcini, una dintre vocalele rădăcinii se schimbă pentru a pregăti pronunŃia pentru elementele care urmează. Această prescurtare este cunoscută drept ‘fenomenul Umlaut’ (schimbare de sunet) sau MutaŃie. Often when a suffix containing a short vowel is added to a root, a vowel in the root is changesd in preparation for what follows. This shortening is called Umlaut (change of sound) or Mutation. Example: cat – kitten, thumb – thumble, fox – vixen a. Sufixe teutonice Sufixe substantivale Teutonic suffixes: Noun suffixes: Agent: -er (-ier, -yer, -ar, -or), -ster, -en, -ther, (-ter), -nd, -le Instrument : -le (-el), -r, -ther, (-der) State, quality, action: -dom, -hood, -head, -ing, -ness, -ship Diminutive : -ing, -ling, -kin, -en, -ock, -y, (-ie, -ey) Augumentative -ard, -ar doer, liar, sailor, spinster, father, daughter, friend, stair, water, feather, kingdom, manhood, goodness, hoping, friendship, landscape, gift, sight, death, earth, Mickey, annie, drunkard b. Suffixe adjectivale Adjective suffixes = belonging to, somewhat like, made of -ed, -en, -ish (-sh, -ch,)-ly, -less (without), -ow, -some (with), -th (-d), -ward, -y ragged, golden, sweetish, French, manly, witless, yeallow, narrow, awesome, fourth, (third) , westward, dirty, heavy 11 c. Sufixe verbale Verb suffixes - care exprimă ideea de frecvenŃă Frequentative : k, le, er brisk, grapple, glimmer/glitter - cauzative Causaive: en, se gladden, hasten, cleanse d. Sufixe latine Latin suffixes Sufixe substantivale Noun suffixes Persoană Person: -ant, -ent, -ate, (-ee, -ey, -y), -ary (-ier, -eer, -ar, -er, -or), -ess or -ese Instrument : -ment, -ory, -ter (-tre) Stare, calitate, acŃiune state, quality, action: -ance, -ence, -age, -ity (-ty), -ice (-ess), -tion (-son), -tude, our, -ure, -y Diminutive diminutives : -el (-le), -let (-et), -ule, -cle, -el, (-sel) Colective collectives: -ary, -ery, -ar, -er Augumentative augumentatives: -oon, -one, -on servant, agent, advocate, trainee, attorney, army, adversary, engineer, vicar, archer, chancellor, baroness, Chinese, countess, ornament, dormitory, monster, spectre, constancy, confidence, courage, enmity, beauty, prejudice, largess, action, reason, magnitude, honour, morsel, panle, circle, rivulet, bullet, pocket, globule, particle, vessel, cavalry, gutter, grammar, balloon, million e. Suffixe adjectivale Adjective suffixes -al, -ane, -ary, -ate, (-ete, -eet), -able, -ous(full of), -ory, -ive loyal, humane, vulgar, ordinary, divine, ornate, complete, discreet, capable, cursory, plaintive 12 f. Suffixe verbale Verb suffixes Frecventative: -ate : agitate Inceptive (inchoative): -esce : effervesce Causative: - fy : glorify, testify g. Sufixe de origine greacă: Greek suffixes Sufixe substantivale Noun suffixes -ic, (-ics) - science and arts : arithmetic, logic, politics, mathematics -y, -ism - state or action : melody, theory, philosophy, theism, antagonism. -ist, -te, -t - agent : antagonist, sophist, apostate, patriot, idiot h. Sufixe adjectivale Adjective suffixes -ic,- ical : epic, poetic, theological, skeptical i. Sffixe verbale Verb suffixes -ize or -ise = to make or do : theorize, sympathise (partial source: http://www.ethnologue.com) C. Alfabetul – Reguli de PronunŃare The English alphabet – Pronunciation 13 Sunetele reprezentate aici sunt acelea care aparŃin dialectului engelzei britanice marcate de accentul RP (Received Pronunciation). În ceea ce priveşte prounŃia, alte varietăti ale limbii engleze diferă de acesta în destul de mare masură, mai ales cand e vorba de pronunŃarea vocalelor şi a diftongilor. The sounds represented here are those of British English spoken with an R.P. (Received Pronounciation) accent. Other varieties of English differ considerably in pronunciation, especially the vowels and diphthongs. Pronunciation The sounds represented here are those of British English spoken with an R.P. (Received Pronounciation) accent. Other varieties of English differ considerably in pronunciation, especially the vowels and diphthongs. a. Ghid fonetic Pronunciation guide /ei/ sunet diftongic: a,h,j,k. (difthong) /i:/ sunetul lung: b,c,d,e,g,p,t,v (long sound) /e/ f,l,m,n,s,x,z /ai/ i,y /u:/ q,u,w /əω/ o /a:/ r Sunete vocalice Sunete consonantice Vowel sounds Consonant sounds /a:/ fast /b/ cab /٨/ cut, butter, but /d/ desk /æ/ match, act, mass /f/ farm /ai/ fly, mind, time /g/ greet /au/ how, down, cloud /h/ house /aiə/ buyer, tyre, fire /j/ young /auə/ hour, tower, power /k/ call /ε/ ten, lend, men /l/ like /εi/ day, play, same /m/ mark 14 /εə/ wear, fair, care /n/ note /i/ sit, tip, dish /p/park /i:/ feel, bee, treat /r/ route /iə/ clear, beard, here /s/ safe /ر/ lost, pot, dot /t/ test /əua/ boat, note, phone /∫/ shore /ر:/ more, floor, board /u/ look /رi/ boy, employ, join /v/ vote /u/look, could, stood /w/ where /u:/ blue, you, choose /z/ zebra /uə/ poor, pour, sure / З/ leisure /ə:/ bird, later, word /η/ bring /ə/ the weak wovel in: about, /t∫/ chairman forgotten, matter /θ/ thin, mouth, three /ð/ that, mother, there /dЗ/ German, Japanese, danger 15 16 I.1. Pronumele subiect I.2. Pronumele complement Subject Pronoun Object Pronoun Pronumele complement înlocuieşte Help me. Give me a hand. complementul direct sau indirect al unui verb Pronumele complement urmează unei We use the object pronoun to replace the prepoziŃii: direct or indirect object of a verb We use the object pronoun preposition sg. pl. sg. pl. I we me us you you you you 17 after a he/she/it they him/her/it them I’m late. Wait for me. Maria doesn’t have the book, I She’s (waiting) outside. have it. Were they present? I can’t see Adrian and Susan; I can’t see them. Tell us the truth! 18 I. 3. DeterminanŃii Determiners Substativele sunt adesea precedate de cuvinte cum ar fi: the , a sau an. Aceste cuvinte se numesc ‘determinanŃi’. Ele arată ce fel de referinŃă însoŃeşte substantivul respectiv. Dintre determinanŃi amintim, de exemplu, articolul hotarât, care precede substative la numărul singular şi plural. Nouns are often preceded by the words the, a, or an. These words are called determiners. They indicate the kind of reference which the noun has. Such determiner the definite article It is used before both singular and plural nouns: Singular: the day, the week, the anthem Plural the days, the weeks, the anthems Determinantul a (ssau an, atunci cand substativul respectiv începe cu o vocală) se numeşte articol şi se foloseşte impreuna cu substantive la numărul singular. Aceste articole (an, a, the) sunt cele mai comune exemple de determinanŃi, însă limba engleză cunoaşte mulŃi alte tipuri de determinanŃi. The determiner a (or an, when the following noun begins with a vowel) is the indefinite article. It is used when the noun is singular: a day , a week, an antet The articles the and a/an are the most common determiners, but there are many others: any day, some day, that week, those students, this paper, whatever taxi, whichever participant MulŃi determinanŃi exprimă ideea de cantitate. Many determiners express quantity: each person, many people, several computers, all examples, every week, both parents, few occasions, enough food, no escape. I. 4. Numeralul I. 4. 1. Numeralul cardinal şi ordinal Cardinal and ordinal numbers Numeralul cardinal reprezintă poate cea mai cunoscută modalitate de a exprimă ideea de cantitate. Numeralele se numesc determinanŃi atunci când preced un substantiv. În această poziŃie, ei exprimă ideea de cantitate. Perhaps the most common way to express quantity is to use a cardinal number. Numerals are determiners when they appear before a noun. In this position, cardinal numerals express quantity: one car , two cars, twelve cars. În aceeaşi poziŃie, exprimă ideea de succesiune de elemente. In the same position, ordinal numerals express sequence: first paragraph, second floor, third prize. 19 I. 4. 2. Numeralul ordinal Ordinal numbers Subclasa numeralelor ordinale cuprinde un set de cuvinte care nu sunt numerale propriu-zise (aşa cum first este legat de one sau second de two), dar pe care le numim, generic, numerale ordinale. Ele sunt: last, latter, next, previous, şi subsequent. Şi acestea îndeplinesc funcŃia de determinanŃi. The subclass of ordinals includes a set of words which are not directly related to numbers (as first is related to one, second is related to two, etc). These are called general ordinals, and they include last, latter, next, previous, and subsequent. These words also function as determiners: next question, last meeting, previous paragraph, subsequent developments Atunci când nu preced un substantiv, numeralele sunt considerate a fi o subclasă a substativului şi, la fel ca acesta, primesc determinanŃi, sau pot fi precedate de numerale propriu-zise (în ultimul exemplu, twos este un substativ la numarul plural si este precedat de determinantul five): the two of us, the first of many; five twos are ten When they do not come before a noun, as we've already seen, numerals are a subclass of nouns They can even have numerals as determiners before them. And like nouns, they can take determiners. In the last example, twos is a plural noun and it has the determiner five before it. I. 4. 3. Pronumele şi adjectivul posesiv Possessive advjective and pronoun Adjectiv posesiv – Possessive Pronume Adjective Posesiv – Pronoun sg. pl. sg. pl. my our mine ours your your yours yours his their his theirs her their hers theirs its their its theirs I. 4. 3. i. Adjectivul demonstrativ Demonstrative Adjective 20 Possessive de apropiere – of proximity de depărtare – of remoteness HERE THERE sg. pl. sg. pl. this man these men that man those men My reservation is valid. This suitcase is mine. Our room is smaller. The smaller room is ours. Adjectivul posesiv se foloseste înaintea unui substantiv cu scopul de a indica apartenenŃa acestuia la un anumit posesor. (We use a possessive adjective before a noun to say who the noun belongs to.) I like house music. My favourite producer is Jaydee. I am sure the next award is his. Her guess was right. The right guess was hers. II. Substantivul The Noun II. 1. Pluralul substantivului; Substantive cu plural regulat Plural of Nouns; Regular plural nouns cele mai multe substantive primesc terminaŃia –s: table – tables; book – books; train – trains. most nouns end in –s dacă substantivul se termină in consoană + -y, -y –ul dispare, substantivul primind desinenŃa finală – ies: match- matches; city – cities; duty – duties. if the noun ends in a consonant + -y, the –y disappears and the ending becomes –ies. în cazul în care substantivul se termină în vocală + -y, adăugăm la rădăcină terminaŃia –s: day –days, toy – toys. nouns ending in a vowel + -y, get an –s at the end of the noun. Când substantivul se termină în –ch, sh, -s, -z, sau -x, primeste desinenŃa finală–es; se mai adaugă – es si la următoarele substantive: potato(es), tomato(es). nouns ending in –ch, sh, -s, -z, or –x get –es 21 În cazul substantivelor terminate în –f sau –fe, desinenŃa de plural devine –ves (excepŃie: roof, hoof): wife – wives; shelf – shelves, loaf - loaves. nouns ending in –f or –fe, change their ending into –ves; exceptions: roof, hoof, proof, cliff, chief, belief, etc. PronunŃie: pluralul s/-es DesinenŃa –es pentru substantivele terminate în –ch, -sh, -s, -z, sau –x se pronunŃă /iz/: box / boxes; wish - wishes. With nouns ending in –ch, -sh, -s, -z, or –x, the -es ending is pronounced /iz/: box / - boxes; wish - wishes. II. 2. 1. Substantive cu plural neregulat: Irregular plural nouns man – men goose – geese woman – women mouse – mice child – children louse – lice person - people ox – oxen brother – brethren (spiritual -); fish – fish/fishes (specii de peşti); brother – brothers (blood -) fruit – fruit/fruits (soiuri de fructe); tooth- teeth die – dice/dies foot – feet II. 3. Exprimarea cantităŃii Expressions of quantity Tipuri de substative Types of nouns 1. Caracteristici Exemple Features Examples Substantive - sunt însotiŃe de some + un He’s got an (interesting) numărabile substantiv la plural în propoziŃii idea/ a (useful) tip. Countable nouns afirmative singular form: şi de any + un The sportsman has won some a map/ substantiv la plural în propoziŃii medals. 22 interogative şi negative banknote/ student plural form: maps/ sunt însoŃite de many şi de They have many friends. There are a lot of job banknotes/students a few. Exemple: Countable nouns are used with opportunities here. We need a map, not some + a plural noun in positive has a few problems with his several (maps). sentences, and any + a plural car noun in questions and negatives - (affirmative) some/several/ Do you/does she have any ideas/answers questions? - (interrogative) any ideas Nobody had any solutions. - (negative) any /no ideas They had no solutions (at all/ - are used with many(a lot of) whatsoever). and a few. Substantive - nenumărabile propoziŃii affirmative şi de any în information. Uncountable nouns propoziŃii interogative şi negative Is there any good music only singular sunt însoŃite de some in She form: în acord cu un verb la singular. has some (new) here? I They haven’t got any advice -sunt însoŃite de much şi de a little advice/information/ Uncountable nouns are used with All you need is a little food weather/music/money/ some in positive sentences and any and rest. knowledge, etc in questions and negatives, but only with a singular noun. money. There isn’t much fun here. - are used with much (a lot of) and It takes a lot of courage to practise this sport. a little 2. Formele posesive: ‘s - pentru persoane şi animale: ‘s the man’s briefcase, şi of (Cazul Genitiv) the cat’s cushion Possessive forms: and of for people and animals: ‘s ‘s după substantive la singular şi unele substative la plural, atunci când acestea nu se termină în –s for people and animals ‘s - after singular nouns and plural Jack’s opinion, the nouns which don’t finish in –s 23 children’s room - după substantive la plural terminate în – s, scriem –s’ ‘s - after plural nouns ending in –s, we the students’ dorm, write –s’ my friends’ house - când sunt două substantive, ‘s se adaugă celui de-al doilea substantiv, dacă este vorba despre o posesie comună, sau după John and Mary’s fiecare substantiv în parte, în caz de suggestion(s) posesie individuală: but ‘s – with two nouns, it is added after the John’s and Mary’s second noun in case of common suggestion(s) possession, or after each noun in case of individual possession. 3. Cuantificarea a piece of/ an item of luggage/ furniture, a piece/word of advice, a substantivelor piece of information/ news, a kilo of strawberries, a carton of cantitative cakes, a bottle/glass of milk, a glass/ drop/ bucket/ gallon of water, Quantifiers a bar of chocolate, a cake of soap, a slice/ loaf, piece/ morsel of bread, a slice of cake, a film of dust, a ray of hope, a bolt of thunder, a flash of lightning, a round of applause, a pint of beer, foot of wood, a pound of rice, an ounce of courage, a piece of music, a bag of money, etc. Note: some indicates the indefinite amount: some water III. Articolul The Article Article Characteristics/ features Examples 1. a + substantive care încep cu o consoană I can see a bus stop over Nehotărât: a/ an + substantive care încep cu o vocală. there. an a + nouns which begin with a consonant sound Is there an information - primă referire an precedes nouns which begin with a vowel desk 24 Indefinite a/an - here? sound. She’s reading a map. first reference 2. PronunŃie: the /ðə/ inaintea substantivelor care The bedroom door was Hotărât: the încep cu o consoană; the /ði/ înaintea open. referinŃă substantivelor care încep cu o vocală. - The trip to Bucureşti was unică, Pronunciation : the /ðə/ before nouns which cheap. generică, begin with a consonant; the /ði/ before nouns The girl is going to the antrerioară begin with a vowel. library. The books she needs can Definite: the - only prior be found there. reference 3. Utilizarea articolului Use of articles - când precede substantive care denumesc mări, The Daily Telegraph, The râuri, nume de hoteluri, localuri, teatre, muzee, Thames, The Pacific, The ziare Ambassador, before nouns denoting seas, rivers, hotels, pubs, The Globe 1. theatres, museums, and newspapers Articolul - când substantivul denumeşte un concept unic the Sun, the Morning Star, hotărât with nouns that denote a unique concept the Pope definite article Notă: articolul the nu se foloseşte la substantivele care denumesc părŃi ale corpului; pentru aceasta se folosesc pronume posesive. Note: We do not use the with parts of the body. We use my,/our/their, etc (I broke my arm and she hurt her leg.) - cu substantive care denumesc o profesie: He is a computer with nouns denoting professions programmer 2. - când însoŃeşte anumite formule de canitate: and she is a midwife. Articolul with some expressions of quantity a pair of shoes; a little nehotărât patience; a couple of times; indefinite a 25 few discretion; a hundred/thousand; once a article - în exclamaŃii, precedat de what: week; forty miles an hour in exclamations with what + a countable noun What an interesting idea! What a pity! What a terrible thing! - înaintea pluralelor substantivele She sau nenumărabile, pentru o referire generală buys only fresh bananas. before plural and uncountable nouns for Mary doesn’t like strawberries. Coffee keeps general reference. - înaintea substantivelor ce denumesc Ńări, you awake. 3. Omisia oraşe, străzi, limbi, feluri de mâncare, reviste, articolului aeroporturi, gări, munŃi: No article before countries, towns, streets, languages, Don’t buy Vogue, buy We will soon enter Braşov. Cosmopolitan. magazines, meals, airports, stations, and mountains - înaintea substantivelor ce denumesc lo at school/work; anumită locaŃie (un anumit loc) precum şi car/tram/ plane, etc; înanintea unor substantive ce denumesc bed; go/come/ mijloace de transport by in/to on foot; return/leave before some places and with some forms of home transport - în exclamaŃii, după construcŃia ‘what’ + un substantiv nenumărabil : What beautiful weather! in exclamations, preceded by what + uncount What loud music! 26 to IV. Adjectivul si adverbul cu gradele lor de comparaŃie The Comparison Degrees of Adjectives and Adverbs Examples: a) regular adjectives and adverbs: (mono-/bosyllabic or polysyllabic) quick, blue, fit, comfortable, fast, correctly etc. b) irregural adjerctives and adverbs: good,well, ill.,bad, far, little, much, many, some. Adjective Positive Form Features (mono-/bi- forma de bază a adjectivelor şi a adverbelor; Adj: syllabic) hard; hot; nu pretty; fast exprimă o comparaŃie. (pollyyllabic) the base form of the adjective or adverb; it impoortant does not show comparison. Adv: easily/gladly Comparative Adj: (mono-/bi- compară două elemente; syllabic) harder; hotter; prettier; faster + -er la adj mono-/bi-silabice + more pentru cele polisilabice the form an adjective or adverb takes to compare two things. - + -er for mono and bi- syllabic adj (polysyllabic) more - + more for polysyllabic ones important Adv (of manner) : + more : more gladly more easily/gladly Superlative Adj: (the) hardest; compară trei sau mai multe elemente (the) hottest; (the) the form an adjective or adverb takes to prettiest; (the) fastest compare three or more things. - + -est for mono and bi- syllabic adj (polysyllabic) (the) - + (the) most for polysyllabic adjectives most important Adv (of manner): + most”: most gladly 27 (the) most easily/gladly IV. 1. Forme Neregulate (adjective şi adverbe) Irregular Adjectives and Adverbs Positive Comparative Superlative good better the best well better the best bad/ badly worse the worst Far farther the farthest Far further the furthest Late later the later or latest Little (amount) less the least many more the most much more the most some more the most ObservaŃie: Less şi least se folosesc şi la formarea comparativelor şi superlativelor majorităŃii adjectivelor şi adverbelor: less important and least important. Less şi fewer nu sunt sinonime. Less se foloseşte împreună cu substantive nenumarabile (less time, less affection), iar fewer cu substantive numărabile (fewer seats, fewer participants). AtenŃie: - er şi more sau -est şi most nu se asociază niciodată. This is the more nicer member of our family.(incorect) This is nicer member of our family. (corect); She is the most nicest sister (incorect); She is the nicest sister. (corect) Note: Less and least can also be used to form the comparative and superlative degrees of most adjectives and adverbs: less important and least important. Less and fewer cannot be interchanged. 28 Less refers to amounts that form a whole or can’t be counted (less time, less affection), while fewer refers to items that can be counted (fewer seats, fewer participants). Never use -er and more or -est and most together. Alte adverbe: Other adverbs yes (of course), no, by no means, by all means, not at all, hardly so, perhaps, probably, definitely, likewise, otherwise, elsehow, anyway, anyhow, etc. IV. 2 Forme adjectivale compuse: Substativ + Numeral În acest caz, substantivul este folosit doar la forma de singular: A four-mile journey; a fifty-dollar banknote, a three-piece suit IV. 3. Indicarea direcŃiei prin adverbe de loc Adverbs of place for giving directions next to; at the corner of; continue straight ahead/to; across from; far from; go up the street; go up the boulevard; go up the avenue; take the street/boulevard/ avenue; near to; turn left/right/at the corner; cross the bridge/ the square; take the second street on the right, at the end of the street. V. Verbul The Verb Formele gramaticale ale verbului sunt determinate de categoriile de timp, aspect, diateză, mod, persoană şi număr. În acest sens, distingem două mari categorii ale verbului: formele predicative şi formele nepredicative. Modurile indicativ şi subjonctiv alcătuiesc formele predicative, care pot forma singure predicatul şi care se acordă în număr şi persoană cu subiectul. Modurile infinitiv, gerunziu, participiul prezent şi participiul trecut formează modurile nepredicative, care nu pot forma singure predicatul propoziŃiei. The grammatical forms of the English verb are rendered by the grammatical categories of aspect, voice, mood, person and number, which divide its forms into finite and non-finite. The finite forms include the indicative and the subjunctive moods, while the non-finite forms include the infinitive, the gerund, the present and the past participle. The finite moods form predicates by themselves, whereas the non-finite forms cannot. Verbele limbii engleze se grupează in două clase mari: verbe regulate şi verbe neregulate. 29 La Past Tense şi la Past Participle, verbele regulate primesc desinenŃa –ed, în timp ce verbele neregulate nu primesc această terminaŃie, rădăcina celor mai multe dintre ele suferind modificări interne la preluarea acestor forme. Există o listă de verbe neregulate la sfârşitul oricărui dicŃionar sau manual de gramatică. English verbs fall into two major classes: regular and irregular verbs. Regular verbs receive the –ed ending at Past Tense and Past Participle. Irregular verbs do not receive this ending and most of them change the form of their root while passing to one of these forms. There is a list of Irregular verbs at the end of any dictionary or grammar books. Infinitive Past Tense Past Participle Vb. Regulate: (to) ask asked asked Regular verbs (to) intend intended intended (to) change changed changed Vb neregulate: (to) take took Irregular verbs (to) see saw (to) understand understood taken seen understood V. 1. Verbul to be, to have şi to have got Verbul to be este folosit atât ca atare, la construcŃiile cu timpul Prezent Simplu, cât şi ca verb auxiliar la construcŃiile cu Prezentul Continuu. to be participates in the construction of the Present Tense Simple – its short infinitive – as well as the Present Tense Continuous, as an auxiliary verb. Be Have (got) Singular plural singular plural I am we are I have, I have got (I’ve got) we have, we have got you are you are you have, you have got you have, you (you’ve got) have got ( you’ve got) 30 he/she/it is they are he/she/it has, they have, they he/she/it has got have got (they’ve (he’s/she’s/it’s got) got) Caracteristici Exemple Features Examples - ‘have’ şi ‘have got’ exprimă ideea de posesie, Jack has (got) a iar ‘have’, idea de acŃiune new credit card. - interogativul lui ‘have’ se I usually have formează la fel ca (nu have interogativul oricărui alt breakfast got) at verb (exceptându-l pe ‘be’) home. la Indicativ Prezent. Do you have any - ‘have’ şi ‘have got’ sunt time for me? folosite doar la prezent. - ‘have’ participă şi la construirea timpurilor Past I have a lot of şi Future. ideas; I've got a - numai ‘have got’ prezintă lot of ideas. forme contrase la pozitiv. Do you have a ‘have’ and ‘have got’ are car? used for ossession. - only ‘have’ is used when talking She will not have time about actions. - the question form for jobs. ‘have’ follows regular Present Simple: - ‘have’ and ‘have got’ are only used in the Present Simple. - use’have’ for the Past Simple or Future forms 31 for two - there is no contracted form for ‘have’ in the positive form, only for ’have got’. V. 2. Timpurile gramaticale The Tense System V. 2. 1. Exprimarea Timpului Prezent Expressing Present Time Timp 2. ConstrucŃie Caracteristici Tense Formation rules Feature Exemple 3. Ortografiere and Examples Spelling rules meaning Prezentul Affirmative Simplu S Present (pers.Isg./pl./II acŃiuni Simple sg./pl./III pl.) acŃiuni repetate S + exprimă adevăruri verb general-valabile; We spend our - persoana III sg, holidays abroad generale; I never leave home late. verb+-s expresses general She + primeşte desinenŃa de pers./nr. -s - verbs in III sg. works always get the -s truths, habitual or hard.(in general) ending (pers.III sg.) My train leaves I/you/we/they Interrogative at 5.42 p.m. travel Do + S + verb? Does my train He/she/it travels (pers.Isg./pl./II leave at …? sg./pl./III pl.) My train does termină în -ch, -sh, repeated actions - verbele care se not/doesn’t -s, -z, -x primesc verb? leave at…. . terminaŃia –es) (pers.III sg.) I get up late at verbs ending in - Does + S Negative + Formule weekends. ch, S + verb + do adverbiale Mary not/don’t Adverbial drops by for a receive (pers.Isg./pl./II constructions cup of coffee. 32 often -sh, -s, -z, –- (he)teaches, -x es sg./pl./III pl.) in the afternoon/ Do you ever (it)analyzes, fixes the do şi go primesc – S + verb + does evening/morning/ watch not/doesn’t at noon/ Discovery (pers.III sg.) (mid)night/ one Channel? esdo do and go receive –es o’clock/ weekend, (he) goes, does on Monday /time, - verbele care se often, sometimes, termină usually, consoană + + -y, – always, never, as a rule. în y → –ies verbs which end in consonant t+ -y -y → –ies (she) tries, cries - verbele care se termină în vocală + primesc –y, terminaŃia -s verbs which end in vowel + –y, only add –s (he) says, plays Prezentul Affirmative: exprimă acŃiuni Continuu S + be + verb + care se petrec în our Present -ing (sau aproximativ) abroad. acest Continuous We are spending we the holiday consonant and add –ing: moment I am leaving for cut – cutting; run – expresses actions Sibiu. running; swim – are She is working swimming. which Interrogative: double happening now or hard. (now) - după –y, -w sau – around now x se adaugă direct be + S + verb + Are you talking –ing -ing ? to me? after –y, -w or –y, Is the student we simply add 33 coming today? Negative: –ing: mix – mixing; S + be + not + They verb + -ing not/aren’t snow - snowing listening! - la adăugarea -ing We are delay – delaying, are not/ la vb. terminate în Formule aren’t travelling –ie, -ie → -y adverbiale home. Adverbial when adding -ing to vbs. ending in constructions Are you busy? - ie, –ie → –y (right) now, at the At the moment lie moment , this I’m working on week –lying, die- dying my project. Julia is resting this week. V. 2. 2. Exprimarea TimpuluiTrecut Expressing Past Time: Past Simple and Past Continuous to be – past forms: I/he/she/it was we/you/they were ObservaŃii: 1. În limba engleză, trecutul se poate exprimă prin mai multe construcŃii gramaticale, dintre care doar unele coincid cu formele de trecut din limba română. Din această cauză, şi din fidelitate faŃă de limba engleză, vom păstra denumirile din aceasta limbă, cu precizarea că, acolo unde e cazul, vom face echivalarea cu denumirile timpurilor din limba română. The tense English system is more diversified than the Romanian tense system. While some forms match Romanian forms quite faithfully, others – most of them – only approximate them. 2. În cazul verbelor limbii engleze, unul din cele mai importante aspecte îl constituie împărŃirea lor în verbe regulate şi verbe neregulate. English verbs are regular and irregular 3. În mod invariabil, verbele regulate primesc la forma de bază (rădăcina), care rămane neschimbată la toate persoanele, terminaŃia –ed 34 Regular verbs end invariably in –ed 4. Verbele neregulate işi schimbă forma de bază, şi, prin urmare, trebuie învaŃate ca atare. La finalul oricărei gramatici sau dicŃionar al limbii engleze există o listă cu verbele neregulate. Irregular verbs change their form and must be learnt as such. Any grammar or dictionary is provided with a list of irregular verbs. Timpul Caracteristici Tense Features ConstrucŃie Exemple Adverbe and Formation rules Examples Adverbials timp Affirmative: I meaning 1. Perfectul Acest travel(l)ed to adverbials Compus/ păstrează în mod S + verb + Simplu omogen, Past Simple formă pentru toate verbs) Mary received the month, at 2.30, persoanele. invitation from the in the park, in Cluj. (regular yesterday, two aceeaşi -ed (for regular verb) years ago, last Exprimă o acŃiune S + II from of secretary.(irregula care întamplat/s-a (for The Tense) receptionist wrote însoŃit de adverbe number on a card. timp/loc: last Interrogative: the taxi subordinate încheiat în trecut (e irregular verbs) de office, etc. (Past r vb) s-a verbs your clauses: They didn’t pay while working, year, yesterday, ten (for all persons) their stay at the when he came. minutes ago, etc). hostel by credit Did + S + verb? This tense has the card. same form for all Negative: What did you do persons; it S expresses a not/did’t + verb completed + did + when she called? (How react?) past action. I saw you at 2.30. 35 did you 2. Imperfectul Exprimă o acŃiune Affirmative: Past care Continuous desfaşurare la un I/III sg.) /were Mary afla I was travel(l)ing în S + was (pers. to Cluj. was moment dat sau pe (pers. I pl.; II receiving o the perioada sg/pl; III pl.) + invitation from the (de)limitată de verb + -ing secretary’s hand. timp. The The action was in Interrogative: was writing the progress at a Was/Were + S + taxi number on a certain moment or verb + -ing? card. during They a limited Negative: period of time I was receptionist weren’t paying their stay reading S + was/were + at the hostel by between 4 and 8 not/wasn’t/were credit card. p.m./ at 4 p.m. What were you n’t + verb + -ing doing when she called? (in that very moment) - exprimă acŃiuni Affirmative: 3. Would Used to care curente în S + Adverbials The used accommodation at the moment, (equivalents of trecut şi care acum to/would + verb used to be better at that time, at Past last year Simple nu mai sunt în when used as vigoare (corespund Interrogative: narrative imperfectului). verbs) These Used to verbe acŃiune + express de recurrent over. they to time, that were past Would + S + younger. (simultaneous actions) activit verb? When we stayed while she was sau /state which is now verbe de stare used Did + S + used travel more when week(end) phrases to + verb a They 2.30, all that Negative: in Spain we would reading did often + travel to (incidental It is used with S both action and not/didn’t use(d) Alicante. action) state verbs to + verb when 36 he Would + S + would exclusiv verbe not/wouldn’t de acŃiune verb It is opened + window used exclusively with action verbs V. 4 Past Participle S + had (for all She had Perfect Are aceeaşi formă persons) + Past completed (Simple and pentru Continuous) toate Participle persoanele Exprimă form) a (III specialized course before she found 1. Past Perfect o acŃiune încheiată that Simple înaintea they arrived at the had + Past acŃiuni trecute. hotel, It has the same realized that the form guide had left. altei for all job. When they persons.It expresses a past action which ended before 2. Past Perfect another past action. Continuous exprimă o acŃiune I had already been care in preparing o bags for half an perioadă de timp hour when/before sau my se desfăşurare de afla de la un moment dat până la arrived. apariŃia altei acŃiuni trecute. 37 the friends the expresses an action which had going on been for a period of time or since a moment before another past action occurs. V. 2. 3 Prezentul Perfect The Present Perfect Timpul gram Caracteristici ConstrucŃie Exemple Adverbe Tense Features Formation rules Examples Adverbials 1. Present Face legătura dintre Affirmative perfect Sinple timpul şi I/you/they have places trecut timpul and I’ve so far, lately, written known a lot of just, already, prezent (‘ve) S + have/ has (uneori şi viitor). + I’ve been to many Adverbials (irregular vb) people (so far/up to yet, Past Aruncând o privire He/she has (‘ve) now) Participle retrospectivă către travelled (IIIrd form) trecut, always, usually, never, ever, seldom/ ne (regular vb) rarely, often/ informează ce s-a Interrogative frequently petrecut or sau pană înainte de written…? momentul prezent. It relates you în Have Has he travelled past long? no time specification since 38 with actions and states Negative to the present. It I have (beginning of not into for (duration looks back from the written present action) the He has not been of action) past, and expresses travelling what has happened before now. Exprimă o acŃiune sau o stare are continuă încă: It expresses action or I’ve had this an car for a year state (I still have it). which began in the past and continues to the present. Diana has - evenimente care been learning fac parte din viaŃa French (for a noastră (în special long Present Perfect (still learning) events that are up Have you ever to now part of our visited life. Romania? time) Simple) They’ve never been here (before). - acŃiuni continuă We’ve care şi în waiting been for present weeks to get actions that are still the result! It’s 39 been going on. raining for days! I am tired - acŃiuni trecute cu because consecinŃe/ been working efecte I’ve în prezent hard. past actions with a George result in the present taken/been has taking computer classes (can use it ) 2. Present Affirmative Perfect I/you/they have Continuous been writing He/she has have since S + have/has + been travelling (beginning) been + verb+ - Interrogative /for (duration) ing Have you been writing…? Has he been travelling long? Negative I’ve not been writing He’s not been travelling 40 În unele cazuri, I have worked here diferenŃa dintre cele all dous been working here forme este insesizabilă. my life/I’ve all my life. Sometimes the difference between the two Perfect Present forms is very slight - pentru verbe care exprimă ideea de durată mare (work, wait, travel, learn, se play), preferă forma continuă; - cu verbe ca buy, die, take, shut, etc, şi care nu exprimă această idee, folosim mai degrabă Present Pefect Simple; - verbele de stare nu se folosesc la They’ve (already) Present been walking for a Perfect Continuous. Present long time. She’s passed the Perfect Continuous + verbs exam. that working/ trying so express the I’ve been idea of long time; hard to finish in Present Perfect time. state She’s Simple + 41 understood you perfectly well. verbs Present Perfect Simple exprimă ideea de She has (already) acŃiune corrected incheiată, mai ales atunci când este însoŃit de o three papers. They’ve changed construcŃie two trains to come adverbială to Cluj. cantitativă. Present Perfect Simple expresses completion of an action when it is followed by a quantitative marker. V. 2. 4. Exprimarea Timpului Viitor Expressing Future Time Forma de Caracteristici viitor Features and Formation Future form meaning rules 1. Future Simple - ConstrucŃie consecinŃă Exemple Adverbe Examples Adevrbials - If you wait too consequence long, you’ll (will) - previziune get bored. 42 - It will be fine prediction - certitudine S+ certainty + - promisiune infinitive shall/will tomorrow. short - This letter will be for me. promise - I’ll always stand - by you. avertisment warning - There won’t be too - hotârare much time left, so determination we’d better hurry. - I shall never smoke. 3. Future - exprimă acŃiuni Continuous Who knows what I in ten years’ viitoare văzute în will be doing time; S + will + be tomorrow this time? desfaşurare. this time next - expresses future + verb + -ing In a week’s time month; at 2 actions they will be enjoying p.m. in every progress moment of their holiday. 2. Perfect Future - corespunde lui Past Perfect She will have left by 4.30; şi when they reach the by the time exprimă hotel anterioritatea unei viitoare faŃă de o + Past acŃiune Participle altă viitoare. - like Perfect, Past it expresses a future action/state completed before another returns; by noon, etc S+ will + have acŃiuni/stări she future 43 action. 4. Present exprimă Continuous What are you doing - aranjamente later? Are you going care sau out with the group? planuri personale. - adverbului - viitorul near e future adverbials S + be + -ing obligatorie. indică apropiat prezenŃa corespunzător adverbe tomorrow, expresses next personal (week)end, arrangements, today, in the plans – always afternoon, etc, accompanied by a - near future time adverbiale cu expression. zilele expresii săptămânii week days adverbials on Friday, last Monday. 5. Present - exprimă acŃiuni Simple sau The train leaves at demersuri S + short inf. oficiale. - 8.45 a.m. at 10 p.m The library closes at 10 p.m. expresses official actions. 6.‘Going to’ viitorul Are you going to when the next intenŃiei si al predicŃiei/ start or not? I’m train leaves deducŃiei logice - going to ask when also called the S + going to + the next train leaves. future of intention short inf. It’s not going to be and any better than it is soon of 44 prediction/logical now. inference. going to rain soon. 6. be to – = urmează să iminenŃa exprimă Look! It’s They are to arrive in in unei the afternoon/in a afternoon/ S + be to + moment acŃiuni/stări. in a moment - expresses the short inf. imminence of an action/state. 8. be about to/ S + be about The speaker is about be to + short inf. on the to end point/verge of S + be/verb presentation. = on a fi pe the the The play is on the punctul de a/ point/verge cât pe ce să/ a of sta să participle + point of starting. -ing She seems on the verge of breaking out. 9. be due to+ un program/ orar S+ inf/ due at deja stabilit. be due The to/at + verb group of students is due to arrive at 8.30. Their plane is due at 15.15. . 10. be bound - acŃiuni care se S + be bound The group leader is to impun = trebuie să obligatorii. the ca to + verb bound to know the details regarding their programme. 45 tour V. 3. Forme verbale simple şi continue - Verbe de stare şi verbe de acŃiune Simple and Progressive verb forms - Stative, dynamic, process verbs Majoritatea verbelor pot avea atât aspect continuu cât şi simplu, exprimând, în funcŃie de context, o acŃiune static-informativă, sau o acŃiune dinamică. Most verbs can take on either of the aspects, expressing, according to the context, a stativeinformative action, resopectively, a dynamic-progressive one. John lives in this house. (it is his PERMANENT rersidence) John is living in this house. (it is his TEMPORARY residence) The stative form of the verb ‘lie’, means ‘be situated gepographicaly’ and its dynamic form means ‘having a recumbent, horizontal position’ Forma statică a verbului lie înseamnă’ a fi situat geographic, iar cea dinamică înseamnă ‘a sta culcat, a se întinde’ This country lies north of Spain., dar şi de poziŃie spaŃială: He left the papers lying on the table. Verbe procesuale: arata evoluŃia graduală a unui process Process verbs: they show gradation of a process: grow,change, deteriorate, mature, narrow, widen, slow down.If it relates a process, then the verb is an action verb. If it relates a state, the verb is a stative verb. Stative verbs: be, hate, like, love, need, belong, believe, cost, get, impress,, know, reach, recognize, taste, think/consider, understand. Generally, stative verbs fall into the following four groups: Tipul verbului Exemple ÎnŃeles de bază = ÎnŃeles Type of verb stare Examples = Changed state meaning = process/action believe, I think it will be a I am thinking of leaving. o opinie sau un understand, successful I proces cognitiv seminar.(opinion) considering leaving. which = proces/acŃiune Basic meaning 1. care exprimă know, schimbat recognize express think/consider, I consider it would thought or imagine, be proper to wait. epinions or impress, intend, I dislike rudeness. mental mean, mind, cognition perceive, please, prefer, 46 am (seriously) presuppose, realize, recall, recognize, regard, remember, satisfy, suppose, think, understand, want, wish. 2. Verbe de be, belong to, We don’t have such They are not having lunch relaŃie concern, consist a lot of time. (relaŃionale) of, contain, cost, It sau care depend exprimă posesia deserve, Relational fit, right now. belongs to on, nobody. equal, I only own a bicyle. Today Susan is being very have, Susan is (as a rule!) nosy. Verbs, or verbs include, involve, a discreet person. which express lack, possession matter, need, owe, own, possess, require, resemble. 3. senzoriale This sandwich tases I am tasting the sandwich. related to senses sour. (characteristic) and perception It also smells odd. The see, hear, feel, rough smell, sound blouse against (action) feels I must smell it. my I am feeling this piece of taste, skin. silk cloth. She sees well with her new glasses. She is seeing the eye doctor. tomorrow. (has an appointment) Jane is no longer seeing George. (is not dating him 47 This song sounds anymore) familiar to me. This idea She is things seeing sounds (=imagining) great! (=seems) They will sound their complaints (=announce) I hear you very well, They don’t shout. 4. care exprimă emoŃii/trăiri which hearing voices (=imagining). They didn’t forget He was forgetting/(again) the was remembering to walk. love, about astonish, (the express hate, like, desire, documents. feelings started process of detest, dislike, ‘I feel better’ = ‘I degradation or of recovery know, believe, am feeling better ( a of an ability) very present state, or Sometimes, for the sake of understand, suppose, want, a gradual process, emphasis, we can say: I’m more simply loving being here! wish, remember, probably forget, forgive, evident in the (I’m fully enjoying every guess, abhor, present) single moment of my stay adore, doubt, here). Couldn’t you see he feel, wonder was hating the conversation? VI. ConstrucŃii interogative Questions 1. Întrebări cu cuvinte care conŃin grupul Where is the station? ‘wh’ (wh – questions) Wh- questions (Close to the city center.) Who gave you this direction? 48 (The dean’s what; who; whose; which; where; when; secretary.) how; why; how + adjectiv/adverb ( how How can I get to the Library? (You’ll see the much/ how far/ how fast) sign right away.) Why were/are you late? (I missed the bus.) When do I pay for the trip? (Even now if you wish.) She didn’t say which she preferred. (She is VI. 2. Întrebări care cer răspunsuri de still undecided.) tipul ‘da/nu’ (mereu despărŃite prin virgulă de restul propoziŃiei) What were you doing at the time? (I was looking for the hostel.) Whose car are/were you washing? Yes/no questions (My Pronumele interogative ‘who’ şi ‘what’ own.) pot îndeplini în frază atât rol de subiect How long have you studied/ been studying ? (subject) cât şi rol de complement (object). În (Not too long.) cazul în care întrebarea vizează subiectul, nu Are you sitting comfortably? se produce inversia subiectului cu predicatul Yes, I am/ No, I am not(I’m not).(sitting şi nici nu e nevoie de auxiliarul do comfortably? Did you see the presentation? (respective does sau did). În schimb, la Yes, I did/ No, I didn’t (see the presentation) celălalt tip de întrebări, aceste fenomene Do you find the lecture interesting? apar. Yes, I do/ No, I don’t (find it interesting). Who and what can function either as subject Was you friend listening? or as object of the sentence. In subject Yes, he/she was/ No, he/she wasn’t questions, there is no inversion and no do (listening). (does or did) auxiliaries, complement questions. unlike in Have you been to the theatre? Yes, I have/No, I haven’t. The Committee asks the candidate questions. Who asks the candidate some questions? (The Committee = Subject) Who does the Committee ask questions? (The candidate = Object) 3 Alte tipuri de construcŃii interogative 49 some Other types of interrogative constructions 1. Întrebări care vizează Subiectul Întrebări care vizează Complementul Subject Questions Object Questions Who makes the schedule? Who did she ask? The group representative does. She asked no one. What has he pointed out? What did he do with the folders? Who left the plan on the table? Who has been to Romania before? 2. Întrebări descriptive: Cum e/ What is your home town like? Cum sunt? Descriptive It’s a nice, quiet, provincial town. questions: What are your room-mates like? What….like? Oh, them. They’re all right, I suppose. I’ve ‘What is it/he like? What are they like?’ hardly met them. A nu se confunda What is he like? cu How is How is your friend now, after that nasty flu? he? (care înseamnă ‘cum se simte (cu She’s much better now, thank you. sănătatea)?’) Note: We should not mistake : What is he like? with How is he? (meaning ‘How does he feel?’and we refer here to the person’s health) VII. ConstrucŃii cu Verbele Modale Modal Constructions Verbele modale: can - could, may – might, must-have to; will-would, shall-should, ought to, dare (to), need (to) Verbele Modale sunt semi-auxiliare, deci se comportă altfel decât verbele obişnuite, adică, îşi formează interogativul şi negativul singure, fără a se ajuta de verbele auxiliare clasice be şi do, nu primesc –s la persoana III sg. prezent şi nu au forme nepersonale (infinitiv, gerunziu). (I can to to greşit). 50 ExcepŃie fac ‘have to’, need to, be bound to, be going to’ la care se regăsesc toate aceste trăsături şi care se numesc semi-modale. Aceste verbe au în cele mai multe cazuri dublu înŃeles: I may go at last! (I am allowed to) I may go today.( I will probably go). De asemenea, majoritatea au o expresie sinonimică care să le înlocuiască în construcŃiile în care acestea sunt improprii: They can swim (present) – They will be able to swim (future). Modal verbs are semi-auxiliary verbs, therefore they have other characteristics than notional verbs, that is, they don’t be or do to form the interrogative and the negative, nor do they get an -s in the III sg. Also, they do not have non-finite forms (gerund or infinitive). Exceptions are ‘have to’, ‘need to, ‘be bound to, ‘be going to’, ‘dare to’, which are called semimodals. They generally carry two meanings I may go at last! (I am allowed to) I may go today.( I will probably go) and have a synonymous expression to replace them in various situations where they are not fit. Toate construcŃiile modale au două forme de bază: A. construcŃiile modale simple, care se referă la situaŃii prezente sau viitoare: S + modal + short infinitive Paul may be leaving on Monday (It is possible that Paul is leaving on Monday); This book may be what I really need. (This book is likely to be what I really need.) B. construcŃiile modale perfecte, care se referă la evenimente trecute Perfect Modal constructions – referring to past events S + modal + have + Past Participle (IIIrd form) He should have arrived by now. (We expected him to arrive already by now.) The course must have started. (I am sure the course has already started.) All modal constructions can be found under two major forms: A. Simple Modal constructions – referring to present or future situations; VII. 1. Can - Could Verbul Forma sininimică Sens Exemple modal Synonymous form Meaning Examples 51 Modal verb 1. be able to abilitate fizică sau mentală (=a fi They can (are able capabil de ceva) to) ski very well. physical or mental ability = ‘to I could (was never be able to do something’ able to) never learn to drive. 2. be likely/ possible posibilitatea ca ceva să aibă loc; It can (sometimes) to (happen) o CAN presupunere be (is very possibility/probability/conjecture likely/possible or a characteristic to get) very cold in these parts in winter.Can it really happen to me/ Is it really happening to me? 3. Can’t = impossible; it’s mposibilitate este exprimată doar It can’t be true (it’s it’s cu ajutorul formei negative unlikey/ not likely impossible to be impossibility – exclusively the true)! He can’t have negative form said such a thing!(It’s impossible/not likely that he said such a thing) 1. was able to o însuşire/caracteristică trecută I remember that ten past ability years ago they could speak Spanish much better (…were able to speak…). 2. it is probable that This route could be 52 COULD it happens/ to happen the right one.(it is ; it is quite likely quite likely that this that… is the right route). 3. Could’t = it’s not This is line 4, so this possible/ it’s hard to couldn’t be the train accept/believe to Braşov. 4. why didn’t you? reproş You could hurry up reproach a bit! (it would be nice if you did it!) (Ai putea să te grăbeşti puŃin!) She could have come in time! (It would have been polite of her to come in time)(Ar fi putut veni la timp!) VII. 2. May - Might Verbul Forma sininimică Sens Exemple modal Synonymous form Meaning Examples Modal verb 1. allowed/permitted be exprimă You may not enter permisiunea/aprobarea de a the building during face ceva; forma negativă conference hours. exprimă interdicŃia de a face May 1. MAY ceva I add expresses something? permission/consent for an But! They will not action; the negative form be/were not expresses interdiction to an allowed/permitted to 53 enter the building action without a permit. exprimă probabilitatea unei It may be better if acŃiuni - e mai puternic decât you left in the morning instead of might expresses the probability for tonight. the occurrence of an action – it is stronger than might it is probable, exprimă probabilitatea (mai Her possible that/to mică) neighbours unei acŃiuni – e mai might tell you where puŃin puternic decât may she’s moved. (I am expresses likeliness (not very not sure either for the whether they know strong, though) occurrence of an action – it is or wheter they are less strong than may willing to tell you.) Leaving today might be an option. Attending the class 2. MIGHT only might been enough understand have to the course. - este o formă de reproş You might at least it is a form of reproach stay until the speech ends. - de asemenea, exprimă o We’ve lost acŃiune ramasă ca ultimă document! alternativă We (neplacută might as well start it vorbitorului) it also shows that the action is 54 the all over again! seen as the last alternative left, which the speaker resents doing. VII. 3. Must – Have to Verbul modal Forma sininimică Sens Exemple Modal verb Synonymous form Meaning Example 1. be compulsory/ - exprimă obligativitatea Well, I really obligatory/mandatory (convingere personală, nu must go now. constrangere) de a face ceva; (I know it’s forma negativă, ca şi may, right to do so) dar mai puternic decât The plane acesta, exprimă interdicŃia de passengers must a face ceva , sau un reproş. 1. MUST (for expresses first pass obligation( through the ‘internal’ personal conviction rather sanitary filter. obligation than imposition); The passengers /conviction) must not open the negative form, expresses their safety interdiction to an action (in belts unless told a stronger way than may) or to. 2. it’s sure/certain You reproach. mustn’t speak to anyone like that! - exprimă certitudine certainty ideea de expresses This must be the way to the hostel (I am sure it is) The train must have 55 already left the station by now. I have to open it’s compulsory/ the obligatory/mandatory meeting today. 2. HAVE TO (for ‘external’ They had to run obligation/ to imposition bus. The will catch that lecturer have give you to the information. 3. SHALL - obligativitate legală it is All books shall obligatory by law (a very be returned in - strong stronger obligation, than it is due time. must); The citizens sometimes it is followed by shall (have to) ‘have obligation/compulsion 56 to’ pay their levies before the close of the year (if they want avoid to being fined). - ofertă de ajutor/serviciu - Shall I carry the bags for you? offer of help - horârarea de a face ceva I shall give up - dublată de certitudina smoking. efectuării acŃiunii. an action which the speaker feels strong for and is certain to happen. VII. 4. Shall – Should – Ought to Verbul modal Forma sininimică Sens Exemple Modal verb Synonymous form Meaning Examples - sfat, recomandare, uneori You should be 1. SHOULD it is advisable/ reproş blând recommendable; it is met that… advice, careful with recommendation, your money (!) mild criticism No one should judge others! One should never judge anyone! - indecizie hesitation Should I stay or should I leave? You should have completed your project last 57 - expresses coincidence, It is really odd when doubled in meaning that George by it is strange/funny/odd should be here that … 2. OUGHT TO now. - recomandare morală = s-ar Laws ought to cădea, ar trebui să, ar fi bine be obeyed by să. every citizen! moral/etical We ought to be recommenadtion caring with elder people. VII. 5. Needn’t to – don’t have to Needn’t to/ Needn’t have to Needn’t = absenŃa obligativităŃii Don’t/Didn’t have to Not have to = absenŃa constrângerii no compulsion lack of obligation You needn’t do it = there is no need to do You don’t have to do it = you are not forced to do it it Needn’t have to = acŃiunea a fost efectuată Didn’t have to = acŃiunea nu a fost desi nu era necesar sa fie efectuată efectuată dar nici nu era necesar sa fie efectuată She needn’t have to come today = She She didn’t have to come today – She came today although it wasn’t necessary. didn’t come today and it wasn’t necessary either VII. 6. Will- Would Verbul modal Forma sininimică Sens Exemple Modal verb Synonymous form Meaning Examples 58 - promisiune promise I will write as soon as I arrive.(I promise to write) încăpăŃânare 1. WILL - încăapăŃânare If stubborn determination refuse to attend (willingness/ determination you the to will course, you’ll fail the do something) exam. - deducŃie logică logical deduction This message will be for me. (I have been expecting it, so I know) - presupunere 2. WOULD Phoning supposition – similar to station could/may/might the would (may/ might/could) spare you the effort to go and ask yourself. VII. 7. Need ≠ need to Need to nu este un veb modal, el se comportă la fel ca orice verb notional (primeşte –s la pers. III sg, etc.) şi exprimă ideea necesitătii unei stări sau unei acŃiuni. Need to is not a modal verb, it behaves like any notional verb (gets –s in III pers sg, etc.)and expresses the necessity of a state or action. They need to return as soon as possible. 59 Need este un modal şi este folosit în propoziŃii interogative sau negative. Need is a modal auxiliary, and it is used only in interrogative or negative sentences. Need she really show off like that? (Chiar trebuie să epateze astfel ?) VIII. ConstrucŃii cu diateza pasivă Passive Constructions (Be + Past Participle; Have + Be + Past Participle; Will + Be/Will + Have + Been + Past Participle; Be + Being + Past Participle; Modal + Be + Past Participle; Modal + Have + Been + Past Participle S + Passive Voice + by…(agent) + with… (instrument) (Complement de agent ; instrumental) The mistake was made by Helen. (agent) The window has been broken with a rod. (instrument) John will be given all the instructions for the project (Lui John i se vor da toate instrucŃiunile…) She might have been told, I don’t know (Se poate/S-ar putea să i se fi spus, nu ştiu) ConstrucŃiile predicative care acceptă forme passive: Present Simple; Present Continuous; Past Simple Past Continuous; Present Perfect Simple; ‘will’-Future, Future Perfect, Modal Constructions. (Acceptable Passive predications) The plan is being discussed at the moment.(Deocamdată / în acest moment/ în momentul de faŃă, planul se află în discuŃie.) Verbe dublu-complementare (cu două complemente) VIII 1. Verbe cu două complemente Verbs with 2 objects Dacă într-o propoziŃie există două complemente, ordinea lor este persoană – obiect. If there are two objects in a sentence, the normal word order is: person (p) – thing (t) You should write your parents (p) a postcard (t) before you leave Paris. With verbs such as say, present, explain, describe, report, we always put the person after the thing: (t) + ‘to’→ (p) I explain this rule to you. 60 Mary will present the new programming technique to the staff. If the thing is a pronoun, it stands behind the verb. I must buy it for my sister (p). These verbs generate two kinds of passive sentences, the subject of each sentence with indirect object and direct object respectively: The organisers have offered the participants a set of useful brochures. a) The participants have been offered a set of useful brochures by the organisers. b) A set of useful brochures have been offered (to) the participants by the organisers. ACTIVE VOICE PASSIVE VOICE 1. Present Simple They always tell me to be careful. I am always told to be careful. 2. Present Continuous They are discussing the plan. The plan is being discussed. 3. Past Simple They didn’t open the museum last year. The museum wasn’t opened last year. 4. Past Continuous The Committee was amending the project. The project was being amended by 5. will-Future the Committee. They will soon check my documents. My documents will be soon checked. 6. Future Perfect They will have closed the office by the time By the time we get there the office we get there. will have been closed. 7. Present Perfect Simple They have passed the new ordinance. The new ordinance has been passed. 8. Modal Simple Any of us can easily do it. It can be easily done by any of us. 9. Modal Perfect I think they could have told me about the I think I could have been told about schedule change. the schedule change. 61 VIII. 1.1. Verbe care nu pot fi pasivizate Verbs which do not take on a passive form Iată câteva: arise, consist of, depend on, exist, fall, happen, lack (even if it takes a direct object) occur, result from-in, rise. În cazul în care verbul este urmat de un complement direct, el poate fi pasivizat. Dacă nu există acest complement direct post-pus verbului, pasivizarea nu are loc. If the verb can be followed by a direct, it can be made passive. However, if there is no direct object to become the subject, the verb cannot be transformed to the passive. Leaving England occurred to me many times. VIII. 1. 2. Cazuri speciale al Diatezei Pasive Special passive cases VIII. 1. 2. 1. Have something done (to you by somebody else than you) She will have her classes rescheduled next week. (I se vor face schimbări în orar săptămana viitoare) My boss has had his office redecorated. (Biroul sefului meu a fost redecorat) VIII. 1. 2. 2. Get something done (ideea de urgenŃă) Get your car serviced today! VIII. 1. 2. 3. Impersonal Passive (used in news) It is said/rumoured/thought/considered + that + ….. (se zice/zvoneşte/crede/consideră că…) Passive sentence 1: It is said that sometimes trains can arrive with great delays. Passive sentence 2: Trains are said to (be likely to) arrive sometimes with great delays. It is said/rumoured/thought/considered that Mary is/was the best candidate for the job. S + is/was said/rumoured/thought/considered + to be/ to have been….(Se zice(…)/s-a zis (…)că…) Mary is said to be the best candidate for the job.(Se zice că Mary este…) Mary is said to have been the best candidate for the job. (Se zice că Mary a fost/ar fi fost…) Mary was said to have been the best candidate for the job.(S-a zis că Mary a fost/ar fi fost…) 62 IX. Vorbirea Directă şi Indirectă Reported Speech Cu ajutorul vorbirii indirecte, cuvintele unui vorbitor sunt preluate şi redate de către un alt vorbitor. Astfel, se schimbă perspectiva (locul/poziŃia/timpul/persoana) din care este emis un enunŃ. In indirect speech, someone’s words are reported by someone else. A change of perspective takes place: the place, position, time and speaking person are modified. Transformări: Transformations I/we/me/us he/she/you/they/him/her/them here there now then today yesterday this week last/the previous week last week the last week come go Imperative ‘to’-infinitive Present (Perfect) Past (Perfect) Past Past Perfect will would Modalele – ramân neschimbate ca formă şi înŃeles, cu excepŃia lui can, care la Past devine, în funcŃie de înŃelesul cerut de context, could sau was able to. Modals don’t change, except the Past Tense of can, which is equally could and was able to. Din punct de vedere semantic, timpul la care se face referire în vorbirea directă NU SE SCHIMBĂ. Modificarea este doar una formală, pentru a se respecta legea concordanŃei timpurilor din limba engleză. Semantically speaking, the reference time from the Direct Speech statement DOES NOT CHANGE – the change is only a FORMAL change, to obey the SEQUENCE OF TENSES law. Vorbirea directă Vorbirea indirectă Direct speech Indirect speech 63 “She is my friend”, Ann said Ann said (that) she was her friend. She ordered me/her/him/us/them to go there “Come here right now!” in that very moment. “I can’t do it by myself right now." She said/complained (that) she couldn’t/wasn’t able to do it all by herself in You should think it over, don’t you that moment. think so?” She advised me to think it over/ She said (that) I should think it over. “The session couldn’t have started.” They agreed/said that the session couldn’t “How old are you; where do you live; have started. how many brothers and/or sisters do you She asked me/wanted to know how old I have?” am/was, where I live/lived and how many brothers and sisters I have/had. IX. 1. Verbe raportoare Reporting verbs With if/whether ask, know, remember, say, see Peter asked whether/if anyone should leave by the morning train. With an object + long infinitive advise, ask, beg, command, forbid, instruct, My parents advised me to stay in tonight. invite, teach, tell, warn With that+(should) clauses or an add, admit, agree, announce, answer, argue, infinitive boast, He added that all candidates (should) wear claim, comment, complain, confirm, consider, suits and ties. deny, doubt, estimate, explain, fear, feel, insist, The chairman expected everyone to be on mention, observe, persuade, propose, remark, time. remember, repeat reply, report, reveal, say, state, suggest, suppose, tell, think, understand, warn. 64 advise, beg, demand , insist, prefer, propose, recommend, request, suggest. decide, expect, guarantee, hope, promise, swear, threaten With question words decide, describe, discover, discuss, explain, He asked me how we could explain all that. forget, guess, imagine, know, learn, realise, I can’t say who could have imagined the remember, reveal consequences. say, see, suggest, teach, tell, think, understand, wonder. X. Formele verbale nepersonale (infinitivul, gerunziul, participiul) Non-finite verb forms (infinitive, gerund and participle) Gerund = the –ing form of a verb (e.g. going, talking, writing, etc) Infinitive = to + simple form of the verb (e.g. to talk, to dance, to write, etc) Participle = forme participiiale – ele intră în compoziŃia anumitori timpuri verbale şi a unor forme adjectivale ; alte utilizări: pentru a scurta unele propoziŃii kinds of participles in English present participle, past participle and perfect participle the first two are part of certain tenses and adjective forms; additional uses: to shorten sentences. Forma verbală Caracteristici nepredicativă Features ConstrucŃie Exemple Form Examples Form of non-finite verb - în combinaŃie cu a) Verb + ‘to’ She’s delighted to see Infinitive structuri ca: you again. we use infinitives in advise, agree, ask, combination with expect, intend, offer, you here again. structures such as: (I’m) delighted/ I’m surprised to meet plan, pretend, hope, I want to return there hono(u)red/ promise, refuse, one day. pleased/ want, would like + They promised not to 65 surprised+ to meet y ‘to’ infinitive be too late. Mary hoped to pass her exam. 1. INFINITIVE - pentru a exprima Read the instruction to scopul: be able to use this - to express purpose: device correctly. She is here (because she wishes) to learn a new language. b) Verb + (Pro)noun + ‘to’Infinitive She told me to be here remind, invite, permit, before allow, (passive : I was told to would warn, like, ask, expect, 9 o’clock. be here….) invite, force, require, The policeman waved encourage, advise, tell the + someone + to do left.(no passive form !) driver to pull Compare: They expect to pass the test (expectation about themselves) and They expect me/the candidate to pass the test. (expectation about someone else) a) îndeplinesc They enjoy staying funcŃie de subiect sau here (= they enjoy complement their stay here) (ca şi substantivele) Studying (= the study -can fulfill a noun of) this is fun. 66 function (as a subject I (don’t) like working or object) in large groups. (= the work) Compare: (subject) Writing essays is useful in 2. GERUND b) Preposition + language study Gerund They are writing (present participle) an essay. This is writing (- adj.) paper. Mary talked leaving for about Canada c) ‘to’ (= preposition, soon. not He is in charge of infinitive particle) + Gerund organizing the trip. Are you interested in joining us? d) ‘not’ precede un gerunziu ‘not’ She is used to working precedes late. a They look/are looking gerund forward to meeting Verbe urmated de un you. gerunziu: I do not object to Verbs followed (their) postponing the by meeting. Gernunds avoid, consider (think about), delay, discuss I (talk accustomed about), keep(on), enjoy, am already to not sleeping very much. mention, 67 postpone(put off), suggest, (e.g. stop ‘stop working’) a) Participiul Prezent Ortografiere Present Participle Spelling: 1. se foloseşte pentru a - final -ie becomes – timpuri y: dye – dying (=a forma 3. PARTICIPLE continue vopsi) ; lie lying - it is used to form -final consonant I am listening! / after short, stressed progressive continuous tenses (e. vowel is doubled : g. Present Progressive) refer 2. as an adjective 3. se – referring; The film is interesting. permit – permitting Did you notice her foloseşte împreună cu verbe leaving the office? senzoriale, mai ales atunci când idea de finalitate a acŃiunii nu este implicită. We use it with verbs of the senses if we do not want to emphasise that the action was (see completed. Infinitive or Ing-Form) : see, watch, notice, Ortografiere feel, smell, hear, find, Spelling: listen to - consonant + -y = - b) Participiul trecut i: Past Participle forma verbelor a treia marry - married a - final consonant pentru after a short, stressed 68 formele verbale vowel: perfecte the I have/had read this permit→permitted third form book. of verbs used either to The book was edited build up by…. - perfect tenses (Present/Past Perfect It was well-written. Simple Having - passive forms bibliography, - adjective forms ) wrote an article (= c) Participiu perfect They read read bibliography Perfect Participle - uneşte propoziŃiile the they the and wrote an article. ) care au acelaşi subiect, atunci când acŃiunea exprimată de construcŃia cu Having been looking participiul perfect s-a for a flat for a good incheiat de while, he wanted to începerea altei acŃiuni. give up.(= He had - joins clauses that been looking for a flat înainte have the same subject active voice: having for a good while and when action + past participle the expressed by the passive he wanted to give up.) voice: Having arrived at the perfect participle was having been + past hotel, they checked in. completed before the participle Having next action begins. redecorated, the house - exprimă o acŃiune looked neat. este în desfăşurare de câtva timp şi o alta începe. one action has been 69 been in progress for some time, and another action starts. - face parte din construcŃiile active si passive. it is used for active and passive constructions. X 4. Like doing ≠ would like to do Like/love to/prefer to do/doing Would like/love to - exprimă plăcerea vorbitorului de a exprimă dorinŃa vorbitorului de a face ceva. expresses face ceva. the speaker’s expresses fondness/preference to do something. the speaker’s wish/desire to do something. They like to spend their weekends in They would like to spend their the mountains. (le place să/ preferă weekends in the mountains. (le-ar să…) You place/ar dori să…) prefer/like to spend/spending yours at home. XI. Structuri Sintactice: Coordonarea şi Subordonarea Syntactic Structures: Coordination (Correlations) and Subordination Cu ajutorul coordonării şi subordonării, unităŃile simple gramaticale de tipul expresiilor sau propoziŃiilor simple se pot combina, obŃinându-se unităŃi complexe. Grammatical units (phrases and the simple sentences) can be combined to make new, more complex units by means of coordination and of subordination. 1. Subordonarea 70 Subordination Orice propoziŃie subordonată este introdusă de o conjuncŃie subordonatoare sau de către un pronume relativ şi va avea în mod obligatoriu atât subiect cât şi predicat, fără însă să poată fi considerată drept o propoziŃie de sine stătătoare. Pentru intregirea sensului este nevoie de precizari suplimentare. A subordinate clause - also called a dependent clause - will begin with a subordinate conjunction or a relative pronoun and will contain both a subject and a verb. This combination of words will not form a complete sentence. It will instead make a reader want additional information to finish the thought. Notă Note Virgula se cere pusă în mod obligatoriu doar dacă subordonata apare în faŃa propoziŃiei principale, altfel utilizarea ei nu este obligatorie. When you attach a subordinate clause in front of a main clause, use a comma. Not having been able to finish our task in time, we were frowned on by the project coordinator. Were we to be busy on Tuesday, find someone to substitute for us. but: Nick needed additional explanations Ø because he had missed the past three courses indicated in the course. My team is very likely to win again the leading position in the district Ø since out entire activity is coordinated by real professionals. Subordination is there to be used to combine ideas effectively, for example, two ideas in a single sentence: My son called. A woman asked about me. Since the two simple sentences are related, you can combine them to express the action more effectively: My son called when a woman asked about me. If the two ideas have unequal importance, save the most important one for the end of the sentence so that your reader remembers it best. If we rewrite the example above so that the two ideas are flipped, the wrong point gets emphasized: When a woman asked about me, my son called. 71 Subordinating conjunctions after Relative pronouns once until that although who whose provided that when which as whoever rather than whosever whenever because since where whichever whom whomever before so that whereas even if than wherever even though that whether if though while in oder that unless why 2. Coordonarea Coordination COORDINATION Conjunctions: or, and, nor, but, or, yet, so Examples Punctuation: , and ; Functions of ‘and’ - simple addition (2nd clause adds something - This museum houses ancient items, and it to the 1st clause) also has a collection of recent international - sequence (2nd clause comes after the 1st currency. clause) - Mark checked in, and (then) he went to meet his colleagues. - result (2nd clause results from the 1st - The maid found the wallet under the bed, 72 clause). and John cryed out for joy. - Catleen prefers the seaside, and her - contrast (2nd clause is in contrast to the 1st husband loves the Scottish mountains. clause) - Your ambition is to come up with a breakthrough, and yet you always seem to - concession (1st clause concedes something miss it in the last second. while 2nd clause gives the actuality or truth) - We should try harder, and you’ll reap your success. - condition (1st clause is a condition for the - The new subscribers benefit from a 20% 2nd clause) deduction, and the regular clients can enjoy - similarity (2nd clause makes a point similar similar advantages with each renewal. to that of the 1st clause) . - He needs to take steps immediately, and - explanation (2nd clause comments on or that’s to change completely both his food and explains the 1st clause) work habits. XII. Fraza CondiŃională Conditional Constructions PropoziŃia CondiŃională exprimă o condiŃie necesară în vederea obŃinerii unui rezultat care apare ca urmare a realizării condiŃiei. It is a Subordinate Clause which contains a condition. Three major types of Conditional Clauses are known according to the condition on which the clause is built. AtenŃie! if = dacă dar even if = chiar dacă, cu toate că. Note: PropoziŃiile introduse de ‘if’ exprimă condiŃiile necesare prin care se ajunge la un anumit rezultat. Aceste condiŃionale determină rezultate predictibile, care sunt motivate de însăşi condiŃia intrinsecă care stă la baza acestora. Spre dosebire de ele, în cazul condiŃionalelor cu ‘even if’, rezultatul la care se ajunge este unul neprevăzut. ComparaŃi: Compare If she studies hard, she will pass the exam (Dacă se pregăteşte serios,va lua examenul) 73 and Even if she studies hard, she won’t pass the exam. (Chiar dacă/ Cu toate că se pregateşte serios, nu va lua examenul). ‘If’ clauses express the conditions necessary for the result. If clauses are followed by expected results based on the condition. In contrast to sentences with ‘if’ sentences with ‘even if’ show a result that is unexpected based on the condition in the ‘even if’ clause. În funcŃie de felul condiŃiei, se cunosc trei tipuri de propoziŃii condiŃionale. Tipul I: sau condiŃionala posibilă şansele de realizare a condiŃiei sunt foarte mari. În propoziŃia principală avem de regulă Future Tense (uneori Present Tense sau un Modal), iar în propoziŃia condiŃională avem Present sau Present Perfect Tense. Type I - often called the ‘real’ conditional because it is used for real - or possible - situations. These situations take place if a certain condition is met; it contains a Possible (sometimes called Probable or accomplishable) Condition. We have Future/Present/Modal in the Main Clause and Present Simple/Present Continuous/Present Perfect in the Conditional Clause. Tipul II: sau condiŃionala puŃin probabilă deoarece exprimă situaŃii imposibile sau chiar nereale; în acest caz, nu mai suntem atât de siguri de realizarea condiŃiei propuse. În cazuri, rezultatul la care se ajunge este unul imaginar. ObservaŃie : Forma verbului ‘to be’ este in acest context ‘were’. În propoziŃia principală avem Past Tense (sau Past Continuous), iar în propoziŃia condiŃională, Present Conditional (would + verb) If he had a student card, he would travel cheaper. I wouldn’t jump to conclusions if I were you. Type II - often called the ‘unreal’ conditional because it is used for unreal - impossible or improbable - situations. This conditional provides an imaginary result for a given situation. Note : The verb ‘to be’, when used in the 2nd conditional, is always conjugated as ‘were’. Tipul III – adesea e numit şi ‘past conditional’ deoarece se referă doar la situaŃii trecute cu rezultate ipotetice. Type III - often referred to as the ‘past’ conditional because it concerns only past situations with hypothetical results If Al Gore had been elected president, the situation would have been different/ would now be different. 74 XII. 1. Alte conjuncŃii care introduc Subordonata CondiŃională: Other subordinating conjunctions Whether or not – indiferent de condiŃiile propuse, rezultatul va fi acelaşi: Whether they have money or not/whether or not they have money, they are determined to leave. (Indiferent dacă au sau nu au bani/fie că au bani sau nu, sunt hotărâŃi să plece.) Unless – are aceeaşi valoare cu ‘if not’: Unless she eats everything, she won’t get any better. E IDENTIC CA SENS CU: If she doesn’t eat, she won’t get any better. (‘Dacă (ea) nu mananca, nu se va simti mai bine) AtenŃie! ‘Unless’ se foloseşte doar în CondiŃionalele de Tipul I. In case şi in the event se folosesc atunci când nu ne aşteptăm ca un eveniment sa se aibă loc. Ambele expresii se folosesc in special pentru exprimarea evenimentelor viitoare. ‘In case it rains, take the bus.’ ‘I'll be studying upstairs in the event he calls’. Only if – înseamnă ‘doar în cazul în care se întamplă ceva – şi numai atunci’. Are practic acelaşi înŃeles cu ‘if’, dar pune accent pe îndeplinirea condiŃiei pentru a se ajunge la rezultatul scontat. Dacă ‘only if’ se află la începutul propoziŃiei, atunci trebuie să inversăm propozŃia principală. Certificates will be released only if the participants attend the entire section of the workshop. If only (!) (o falsă CondiŃională) exprimă, de fapt, o dorinŃă ipotetică, o intenŃie prea puŃin realizabilă. PropoziŃia Principală se deduce din contextual semantic al ideii de dorinŃă: If only they were given the right directions (they would be able to reach the hotel for the check in)! Măcar dacă li s-ar fi dat instrucŃiunile corecte (ei ar fi reuşit sa ajungă la timp pentru cazare)! Whether or not expresses the idea that neither one condition or another matters; the result will be the same. Notice the possibility of inversion Unlessexpresses the idea of ’if not and is only used in the first conditional. In case and in the event usually mean that you don’t expect something to happen. Both are used primarily for events. Only if means ‘only in the case that something happens - and only if’. This form basically means the same as ‘if’. However, it does stress the condition for the result. Note that when ‘only if’ begins the sentence you need to invert the main clause. 75 If only is a false Conditional, in fact, expressing a wish, a hypothetical desire or a hardly accomplishable dream. The Main Clause is understood from the semantic context of the wish. when=if When (=if) I am not supposed to, I don’t interfere. XII. 2. CondiŃionala de Tipul I (CondiŃia Reală – cu referire la viitor sau la prezent) Type I Conditional –Probable Condition - exprimă o situaŃie anticipată posibilă/foarte realizabilă. (Acest tip de condiŃională este identic ca structură cu subordonată temporală introdusă de un adverb de timp: when, as soon as, the moment, etc.) If anything happens, I will stand by you. (Dacă ceva se întamplă, eu te voi sprijini.(în mod sigur!) If/When/As soon as/ The moment Mark comes, I will talk to him. - mai exprimă o situaŃie de tipul cauză-efect (în acest caz, avem Present Tense in PropoziŃia Principală şi tot Present Tense în PropoziŃia CondiŃională): If you work, you have money, if you don’t work, you starve. Situations that are always true if something happens. This use is similar to, and can usually be repleaced by, a Time Clause using a time adverbial. TYPE I PropoziŃia Principală ConjuncŃia Conjunction PropoziŃia CondiŃională Conditional Clause Main Clause Îndeplinirea acŃiunii are un grad mare de certitudine -condiŃie posibilă. Probable, FUTURE if You will get a room you check in in time. highly I’m going to miss the fulfillable condition beginning -promise/prediction You’ll fall asleep PRESENT you don’t leave now. PRESENTCONTINUOUS you are not working faster. PRESENT - warning The plant grows it is watered regularly. 76 MODAL - cause-effect you finish. You can/may leave PRESENT PERFECT You can’t/won’t take you haven’t written the the exam essay. (stress on action completion) XII. 3. CondiŃionala de Tipul II (CondiŃia improbabilă sau nereală) Type II Conditional (Imporbable, unreal condition) - exprimă o condiŃie improbabilă, îndeplinirea acesteia nefiind la fel de sigură ca în primul cazde condiŃie; este vorba mai mult de situaŃii ipotetice, imaginare. Traducerea in limba romană se face cu ajutorul modului condiŃional-optativ prezent. În PropoziŃia Principală avem would/could + verb, iar în PropoziŃia CondiŃională avem Past Tense/ Subjonctivul ‘were’. Often called the unreal or hypothetical or even absurd conditional because it is used for unreal impossible improbable - situations. This conditional provides an imaginary result for a given situation. NOTE: The verb ‘to be’, when used in the 2nd conditional, is always conjugated as ‘were’. TYPE II PropoziŃia Principală Main Clause ConjuncŃia PropoziŃia Conjunction CondiŃională Conditional Clause AcŃiunea are sanse mai mici de indeplinire decât în cazul Tipului I – condiŃie if probabilă PRESENT PRESENT Improbable CONDITIONAL you checked in in time. condition, likely to less You would get a room I were you/18 again be 77 fulfilled I would try again (unreal, because I can - hypothetical never be you/ I no PAST condition longer 18) The plant grew - PAST unreal/absurd it condition regularly. was watered - past causeeffect XII. 4. CondiŃionala de Tipul III (CondiŃia imposibilă/nerealizată) Type III Conditional - exprimă o condiŃie neîndeplinită datorită faptului că timpul rezervat realizării ei a trecut. Este, de fapt, un regret tardiv, exprimat foarte bine de constatarea consecinŃei acestei neîmpliniri. Aceasta nouă frază este introdusă de ‘but…’ iar predicatele din ambele propoziŃii ale acesteia sunt la Past Tense. The Dean would have considered their proposal, if they had requested a meeting with him. (!but /however they did not request a meeting with the Dean, therefore/ so, and consequently their proposal was not reconsidered) (Decanul le-ar fi luat în considerare propunerea, dacă ei ar fi solicitat o întrevededre cu el.) She would be able to write much better (now), if she had practiced more. (!but she did not practice enough, so she is not able to write any better now) (Acum ar fi în stare să scrie mult mai bine dacă ar fi exersat mai mult.) Often referred to as the ‘late regrets’ because it concerns only past situations with no fulfillable perspectives. Nothing can be done anymore to solve a past failure.) TYPE III PropoziŃia Principală Main Clause ConjuncŃia PropoziŃia Conjunction CondiŃională Conditional Clause 78 AcŃiunea nu a fost efectuată - PAST CONDITIONAL PAST PERFECT condiŃie You would have got a you had checked in in imposibilă room if (but you did not check in Impossibe condition, time. not in time, so/therefore/in fulfilled conclusion/consequently, Sometimes you did not get a room; called a ‘late but since you did not regret’ check in in time, you did or a ‘missed chance’ not get a room) (even if it is not expressed, we feel there is an implied ‘but’) XII. 5. CondiŃionale mixte Mixed conditionals I + II Mary will get the prize if she worked harder. II + III Mary would be a winner now if she had worked harder. XII. 6. Inversiunea în propoziŃia condiŃională Inversion in Cconditional Clauses Se foloseste cu scopul de a accentua condiŃia It is used for emphatic purposes Were she to come, I would talk to her. = If she were to come, I would talk to her. Had we decided to leave sooner, we would have met Tom at the airport. + If we had decided to leave sooner, we would have met Tom at the airport. XII. 7. Alte moduri de a exprima o condiŃie Other ways to express condition 79 1. Supposing I might give Mina the book, supposing she drops by (which I hardly think will happen) 2. If it weren’t/wasn’t for/ If it hadn’t been for = but for Type II If it wasn’t for Michael, I would be lost! (daca n-ar fi Michael, as fi pierdut(a)) But for Michael, I would be lost Type III If it hadn’t been for Michael, I would be lost (NOW) /I would have been lost. (THEN) (daca n-ar fi fost Michael, as fi pierduta (acum)/as fi fost pierduta (atunci) But for Michael, I would be lost (NOW) /I would have been lost. (THEN) 3. If so Ken may refuse to substitute for me. If so, (= in this situation) else. 4. Should (= it is rather unlikely to happen) If Ken should refuse to substitute for me, which I doubt it will happen, I’ll have to find someone else. (with inversion) Should Ken refuse to…, I’ll have to resort to someone else. 5. Happen to – expressing chance Tell Ann I won’t be able to be there in time, if you (should) happen to see her. XIII . Alte tipuri de PropoziŃii Subordonate Other Types of Subordinate Clauses: 1.Noun Clauses are classified into: Subjective, Predicative, Direct Object, Prepositional, Appositive 2. Adjective Clauses or Attributive 3. Adverb Clauses (the most important of them): of Time, of Place, of Purpose, of Reason, of Result, of Manner (Comparison), Conditional (see ch. XI), of Concession (Contrast), Relative, Participle 80 Type of clause Function Examples it fulfills the function of a The results are misleading. Direct Object What the results report, is misleading. (Subject) I do not know his address. I do not know where he lives. it fulfills the function of the Object of a preposition Give the statistical part of the project to James. Give the statistical part of the project to whoever can manage it best. 1. Noun Clause it fulfills the function of the That fact – the opposition’s Apposition success (the fact that the - the conjunction that before a opposition won) discouraged noun clause may be omitted many. in some sentences I know (that) she is right. We need reliable employees (= who are reliable). We took the trodden path (=which had been trodden). 2. Adjective There is no longer such a Clauses thing as a safe neighbourhood - if it is not used as a subject, (= where people feel safe) the relative pronoun in an John adjective clause is the person I trust. may (=whom I trust) sometimes be omitted. - may modify a verb, an Soon the lights went out. adjective, an adverb, infinitive, a gerund, an When the windstorm hit, the a lights went out. 81 participle, or even the rest of No alcoholic beverages are the sentence in which it sold locally (=sold where I appears. Many adverb clauses live. 3. Clauses Adverb can take various positions in a Speak distinctly. Speak so that sentence. Adverb clauses are you can be understood. ordinarily introduced by If I can save enough money, subordinating conjunctions. I’ll go to Alaska next summer. Some adverb clauses may be If not, I’ll take a trip to St. elliptical. Louis. Types of Adverb Clauses 3.1. Adverb Clauses of Characteristics Examples Time John (had) made some phone calls before he - relate other actions to answered his e-mails. the activity in the main clause. - John answered his e-mails talked to Anca are introduced by after he (had) made some adverbs of time such as phone calls. before, after, while, as John opened his soon as, by, when, as mail box when he made which indicate the time some phone calls. when something happens. John opened his mail box while he made some phone calls. John had (already) made some phone calls by the time he started reading his e-mails. John (already) will made have some phone calls by the time he 82 checked his mail box. 3. 2. Adverb Clauses of I remember where I put Place the book. – indicate where the place You will something waiting happens. find exactly them where they are now. I accept to live wherever you decide (to). 3. 3. Adverb Clauses of - it states the purpose of I tried to buy the car to be Purpose the action in the able to come into the city independent clause. more easily. - the most common type of purpose clause is a The report was written in order to give a brief to-infinitive clause, but in presentation of the formal writing, in order research results. to and so as to, so that or in order The lecturer came up are with that preferred. additional explanations so that the - the difference between students would be able so and so that is that so to/could get the implies that that the point more easily. cause was deliberately done by someone in order We offer new courses on to get a specific result. - other ways cultural matters with a of view to upgrading the expressing purpose are: general public’s for the purpose of, with a knowledge in the domain. view to, with the intention of, with the object/aim of. - with these phrases the verb must be in the -ing form. 83 3. 4. Adverb Clauses of Reason they why As say something happens I needed information - are introduced by the subject, I conjunctions because, as enroll more on the decided to for an extra or since, when(!) or the semester. prepositional because phrases and of They didn’t buy the on house because it was too deteriorated. account of. My room mate was unable to work on his project on account of a malfunction in the computer. (because the computer malfunctioned.) 3. 5. Adverb Clauses of Cause and Effect Because They received a high Notice how because can mark on their exam be used with a variety of because they had studied tenses based on the time hard. relationship between the I’m studying hard two clauses. because I want to pass As my exam/because I know means the same as too little. because but is used in more formal, written As the test is difficult, English. you had better get some As long as means the sleep. same as because, but it is more As long as nobody will be informal, spoken English. in this house for a while, Since means the why don’t you move in as yourself? same because. 84 It tends to be used in more informal spoken Since his application was English. Important note: rejected , he decided to Since when used as a apply soemhwere else. conjunction is typically It’s clear we shall have used to refer to a period get up earlier since work of time, while because starts at 8. implies a cause or reason Due to the fact that means the as We will be staying for an same because but is generally extra week due to the fact used in formal, that we haven not yet very finished. written English. Inasamuch as means the as Inasmuch as the students same because and is used in had very succesfully written completed their exams, formal, their parents rewarded English. their efforts by giving them a trip to Paris. 3. 6. Adverb Clauses of - it is used with these Although/even Contrast (Concession) words or expressions: we are if/though loadsed with despite + noun/possessive work, you can leave for a adjective + gerund, in spite few days. + You can leave for a few of noun/possessive days adjective+ gerund if/though we are loaded (al)though, if/though, Although/even even with work. however, Despite the fact that we whoever (and the rest of loaded with work, you the words combined with 85 can leave… Despite our –ever), yet, while, being loaded with so whereas, at the same much work, you can time, all the same, or to leave… inverted structures: In spite of our being adj. + as + S + may/might loaded with work, you be/was can…/In spite of the fact that we are loaded with work, you can….. However loaded with work we may be/are, you can leave all the same. Loaded with work as we are/as we may be, you can (still) leave…. We are loaded with work indeed, yet/but you can leave…. We are loaded with work, all the same, you can leave…. We are loaded with work, yet you can leave… We are loaded with work; at the same time you can leave…… We are loaded with work; nonetheless you can leave….. 3. 7. Adverb Clauses of - it tells us how to do The directions should be Manner (Comparison) something. complied with as the - its connectors (all have organizers indicated you the same meaning): as, as to. 86 if, and as though. Read the text aloud as if - the comparison can be you were an actor on either realistic or stage. unrealistic. Apply for that college as though it was/were the - realistic ultimate solution. in comparisons, are used She looks at me as if it’s normal tenses of the a joke. (it’s possible that verbs to agree with the it’s a joke.) main clause (here , we The child trembles as use the present tense to though he saw something agree with the present terrible. tense in the main clause.) - in comparisons, Maybe he really saw unrealistic something terrible. we use He cries as though he ‘more past. were stabbed. Nobody stabbed him. He dances as if you were Nureev. He’s not Nureev. Note that as can be an As you refused to help adverb clause connector me, I asked someone of time, manner and else.. (reason) reason. We will keep you informed as the decision is made. (time) Behave as you were told to. (manner) 3. 8. Adverb Clauses of - indicates the result of The lecture was boring Result an action or situation - and irrelevant, so some of are introduced by the students began to fall 87 conjunctions such as so, asleep. so... that, or such … that Peter was having and some other words problems that have the with same mathematics, so he went semantic coverage, such to see his tutor to ask for as: therefore, thus, in advice. There consequence, were so many consequently, for this/that books on the subject that Cindy didn’t know where reason to begin. There was such a lot of material to cover that Ivan found it difficult to keep up with his studies. - other ways of indicating the result of an action or The lecture was boring situation are and as a and irrelevant, and as a result or with the result result some of the students began to fall that. asleep. The lecture was boring and irrelevant, with the result that some of the students began to fall asleep. As a result can also be used at the beginning of a new sentence. The lecture was boring and irrelevant. As a result, some of the students began to fall 88 asleep. Causal relations can be expressed by ing-clauses of result. The government increased the duty on wine. As a result, there was a fall in demand. The government increased the duty on wine, resulting in a fall in demand. 3. 9. Participial Clauses -is used in writing, in order to include as much information as possible in the same sentence: - if we use a participle construction used to combine or shorten clauses, both clauses should have the same subject. - it uses the conjunctions as, because, since and relative pronouns who, which are left out. - the conjunctions before, when are obligatory in the participle clause,while the conjunctions after and, I smelled them (namely, while are omissible. my next door neighbours) 89 Participle Clauses with cooking roast. different Subjects - if the main clause Mary was writing an econtains one of the mail, following verbs: when her entered boss the see, notice, watch, smell, office.(correct) feel, find, hear, listen to. - apart from exceptions Writing an e-mail, her the boss entered the mentioned office.(wrong) above, participle clause and main clause should have the same subject, otherwise the sentences might sound rather strange. 3. 10. Subordonata Caracteristici Relativă Exemple Features Examples The Relative Clause - este introdusă de un cuvânt Students relativ-interogativ: who can develop who, independent learning skills often which, where, sau de that. achieve good academic results. it begins with a question word There will be a new rule that or the word that. addresses immigrants who enter the country after 2008. A university is a place where people pursue advanced knowledge in specific academic disciplines. Anyone can tell the difference between a public place or one in - adverbe relative which access is granted only by a 90 special permit or membership card. relative adverbs when (= in/on which) where (= in/at which) why (= for which reason) It was on the night when they arrived. - modifică un substantiv sau This is the shelf where I left the un pronume aducând papers. informaŃii suplimentare despre Tell them why (the reason why/for acesta. which) we have to meet. it modifies a noun or pronoun (it identifies or gives more information about it). - la combinarea propoziŃiilor cu o relativă se câştigă în fluenŃă şi se evită redundanŃa; de asemenea, se pot introduce informaŃii adiŃionale. She asks for the file which contains a text gains in fluency and the addresses reference information avoids word redundancy if we of the candidate. combine sentences with a relative clause. The insertion of additional information can Ted was on the bus (which) I had missed. also be done in this way. - deoarece nu este de sinestătătoare, relativa are nevoie de propoziŃia principală it does not have complete autonomy of meaning, therefore it is joined to the main clause. - who, which, that introduc atât Pronumele Subiect (pronumele 91 relativ urmat de un verb) cât şi Pronumele Obiect (pronumele relativ urmat de un substantiv) who, which, that introduce both the Subject and the Object Pronoun; the relative pronouns followed by a verb are subject pronouns. They are must always used. If they are not followed by a verb (but by a noun or pronoun), they are object pronouns. Object pronouns can be omitted in defining relative clauses (called Contact Clauses). 1. - give details about the subject The question which we usually Restrictive/Defining/ - it is never put between avoid asking refer to personal Identifying Relative commas Clauses matters. . they are most often met in A personal question is a question definitions that we always avoid asking. - Contact Clauses have a relative clause without the The policeman (who/whom) we relative pronoun asked our way didn’t know English. - if instead of a nonspecific noun is used a specific one instead, the relative clause becomes nonessential and thus requires commas to separate it Transportation (that is) arranged for from the rest of the sentence. conference members will be paid for - to make the style more by the host country. concise, we reduce the The local members (who/whom) the 92 defining relative. president asked to supervise the proceedings of the conference are paid extra. The lecturer who teaches Portuguese is absent today = The lecturer teaching Portuguese is absent today. - Participles can contract relative clauses: To be sure about the righ departure hour, the receptionist phoned the railway station, which, was very - the Infinitive is used in helpful for us all. Relative Clauses The city where I graduated is a well- sub-type relative clauses: known essential and university centre in non-essential Romania. clauses. They dis- ambiguate a noun (mention which one of Sibiu, where I graduated, is a wellmany elements are/is meant) known university centre in - the same clause can become Romania. non-restrictive. 2. Non- - give additional information Policemen, who/whom we usually Restrictive/NonDefining/ on something, but do not ask for direction, are indispensable Non- define it in crowded places. Identifying Relative - are put between commas Clauses My highschool friend Lavinia, who - that, which is not used in a lives in France, was promoted in non-defining relative clauses April. (‘who lives in France’ is not - who and whose are used for essential, which means that I only persons have one highschool friend, whose - which and whose are used for name is Lavinia,and she does not things need to be defined by the relative - object pronouns must be used clause) 93 here. - unlike defining clauses, these clauses cannot be reduced. XIV. ConjuncŃii Subordonatoare care introduc PropoziŃii Adverbiale Subordinating conjunctions Introducing Adverb Clauses Temporală Cauzală Time Cause Contrastivă CondiŃională Condition and Opposition XV. Effect Con after, before, when, while, because, since, although, even if, only if, unless, as, by the time (that), as as, as long as, so though, though, whether (or not), even if, soon as, since, until, long as, due to whereas, while, providing (that), in case whenever, the first time the fact that in spite (that), the next time (that), despite of, (that), provided (that), in the event (that) cŃii cu: as if/th the last time (that), every oug time (that) h; ‘wish’; I’d rather/sooner/better; I’d prefer; it’s (high/about) time; Unreal Tenses XV. 1. As if / as though + past tenses Timpul stru de ConstrucŃie referire Form SituaŃie reală SituaŃie nereală Real Unreal (implication) Reference time (implication) Referire She la S + past tense + behaves as She behaves as if/though she prezent S was if/though she was were the boss (she is not) Present (real)/were the boss. (she is) – Mike reference (unreal) we use a regular if/though he owned the land. predicate speaks/sounds as (he owns it or he does not, Se poartă de parcă/ according to the context) ca şi când ar fi şefa we 94 use the Subjunctive (chiar este). ‘were’ for all persons Mike speaks/sounds as if/though he owned the land. (he owns it or he does not, according to the context) Referire la The distinction She behaved/ She behaved/ behaves as trecut: S + Past between the behaves as if/though if/though she had been the Perfect Real the she had been the boss (she wasn’t) Past refrence Unreal situation boss (she was )she and is not marked wasn’t, according to grammatically; the context) in Se poarta/Se purta both situations use the we de parc/ca si cand ar Past fi/ar fi fost sefa. (in functie de cerinta Perfect contextuala) XV. 2. Wish Meaning wish and hope Formulaic ‘want’/’intend’ + verb function Regrets about Regrets present about past situation situation Whoever wishes She never fails I wish you all Ted wishes he I wish (now) I to speak first, is to wish me luck the welcome begin. to when I best/many had a car right hadn’t tackled start returns of the now (he doesn’t) (before/then) work. day! I no longer wish this subject in She doesn’t wish (Moreover) She I could be/ was/ the first place. to were different. see right now. anyone says she hopes that I have all - with ‘will’ = the luck in the -formal with Ist hadn’t tackled IIIrd (then) this and 95 I wished (then) I ‘be willing to’ : world. persons sg) : subject in the I wish you would The pilot always I wish I were first place. stop smokinh in wishes (subjunctive) the here! (you are passengers annoyed about a safe a The manager somewhere else! wishes and He wished he (now)/wished habitual negative pleasant flight, had behaviour/action) which means here! not been (then) he had hired more staff. that he hopes they will have a safe and pleasant flight. XV. 3. I’d prefer (it); I’d rather 4. It’s (high/about) time I’d prefer/I’d prefer it; I’d rather it’s (high/about) time - preferences about oneself: would prefer It’s (high/about) time + Past Tense to/ would rather do (I’d prefer to do/I’d - an urge/ a reproach/ a warning – present rather do something) reference: Maybe you’d prefer to wait here/you’d rather an action should already have taken place wait here. I don’t believe you say it’s high time I was I’d prefer to listen to you (rather than (to) ready with all this work! someone else). The board decided (that) it was high time - negative forms they (had) started working on the new I’d rather not listen to someone else. project. I’d prefer not to work late tonight. - a reproach - past reference: It is/it was - to express preferences: prefer to (do) or (high/about) time + Past Perfect prefer + verb in -ing It’s/was high/about time Mark had taken on a They say they prefer to study/studying about job. this topic some other time. - prefer something to something else Many people prefer self-training to gym 96 training. They prefer to train by themselves rather than pay fortunes to personal trainers. Preferences about someone else – present reference: Past Tense is used I’d rather + Past Tense/ would I’d prefer it if + Past Tense/ would I’d rather you wouldn’t/didn’t interrupt me! I’d perefer it if you didn’t/wouldn’t interrupt me so often! Preferences about someone else – past reference: Past Perfect is used I’d prefer it if you hadn’t bought that car (you did!) XVI. Inversiunea şi accentuarea retorică Inversion and Emphasis 1. Inversia în propoziŃii afirmative Inversion in statements 1. Inversia subiect-verbeste o caracteristică a propoziŃiilor interogative, însă poate apărea şi în propoziŃii afirmative împreună cu anumite forme (expresii) adverbiale. Subject-verb inversion is typical of interrogative sentences, yet it may be used in affirmative sentences too in combination with certain adverbials. 2. Inversia după expresii adverbiale la forma negativă Inversion after negative adverbial expressions Formele adverbiale negative apar la începutul frazei pentru a se obŃine un efect emfatic. Unele expresii adverbiale negative pot apărea şi la începutul unei propoziŃii, îndeplinind astfel un rol emfatic. Ele caracterizează comunicarea scrisă, mai degrabă formală. Alte forme similare acesteia 97 sunt: Never, Rarely/Seldom, Hardly /Scarcely… when, No sooner… than, precum şi unele forme care îl conŃin pe ‘no’. Only se foloseşte în mod similar. Some negative adverbial expressions can be put at the beginning of a sentence for emphasis. These structures are usually found in formal, written contexts: Not only + auxiliary + subject (+ main verb) Not only do I possess a Computer Programming diploma, I also have one in Mathematics. Other expressions that can be used in this way are Never, Rarely/Seldom, Hardly/Scarcely… when, No sooner… than, and a number of expressions including ‘no’. Only can also be used in this way. Only much later could I get the meaning of his words. Hardly/Scarcely had the film started when thjr transmission stopped. No sooner are the forms handed out than everybody begins to fill them in(out). Never will she (ever) return here. Under no circumstances are you to arrive later than 1 p.m. 3. Inversia după neither, nor, so şi as. Inversia dupa neither, nor si so indică faptul ca două lucruri sunt similare. Inversia subiectului cu auxiliarul predicatiei se comportă astfel: Inversion after neither, nor and so indicates that two things are the same. Inversion of the subject and auxiliary is needed after these phrases when they are used in this way: I can’t arrive in time and neither can you. She doesn’t understand the indications. - Nor do I. He was happy, and so were we. They are very inquisitive, as tend to be most children nowadays. 4. În fraza condiŃională: ‘were’ şi ‘had’ sunt in deosebi utilizate în engleza cu caracter formal pentru a-l înlocui pe ‘if’. In conditional sentences: inversion after ‘had’ or ‘were’, mostly in formal, written English, to replace ‘if’: Were you to meet Harry, tell him I’ll be expecting him on Friday morning. Had I been able to attend the meeting, I would have presented that paper. (=If I had been able to attend the meeting, …) 98 5. Inversia după expresii ce indică locul (locaŃia) Inversion after expressions of place After expressions of place, inversion of the subject and the verb, not an auxiliary, is possible when the expression starts the sentence: Down there will you find a better parking place. Off goes Mary. She’s in such a hurry! 2. Emphasis In/when suggesting, expressing opinions or feelings such as irritation or annoyance, disagreement, we resort to emphasis. Some emphatic forms have already been treated. These are: - the use of the Passive Constructions where the stress falls on what happens to something rather than who or what does something.- - Inversion. - the Present/Past Continuous + always/forwevr/continually to express annoyance. Others possibilities are: - the use of (emphatic) do or did, often to express something contrary to what another person believes. I did call John last night. (Why don’t you believe me?) - ‘cleft’ constructions There are two forms of clefts: the It-cleft and the Wh-cleft. The It-clefts mark given information that the listener is not necessarily thinking about, while with the Wh-clefts, we assume that the listener is thinking about the given information They are a form of embedded structures, which interpose noun phrases/adverb/prepositional phrases between two clauses. They function as meaning indicators in a sentence ina an emphatic way, by pointing out which element is new information and which is given information. One such examples is the It-cleft. The clefted phrase stands for the new information How did you (come to) meet your coordinator? The answer to the question (i.e new information) is clefted: It was when I was loking for a topic that I chanced to meet prof. Emerson. a. It is/was/will be + S/Adv.of Place/Time/Cause … (Ist part) It will be you who (IInd part) will present the report. (emphasis on you) 99 that instrad of You will present the report It is now that I’m telling you! instead of I’m telling you now. This is another way of expressing an It-cleft The paper (which/that) she meant is about anthropology not medicine. meaning It is the paper about anthropology that she menat not (the one about) medicine b. ‘wh’-cleft constructions, the new information comes after the verb be. (’wh’-word - is/was/ will + be) In such constructions, however, the clefted noun phrases, prepositional phrase, or adverb follows the verb be, and the rest of the clause is placed between the two parts of the construction. They are nondefining relative clause versions. The three students who were appointed to work on this project are X, Y and Z. It is/was students X, Y and Z who were appointed to work on this project The train where they met is not the Orient Express. It was on the OE that they (had) met. Where they (had) met was on the OE Who your brother said he had given the money was Michael (and not (to) someone else) This is an alternative in Wh-constructiuon to an It-cleft: When Peter said he would arrrive was at 3, not at 4. Meaning: It was at 3 not at 4 when Peter said he would arrive. 100 XVII. Subjonctivul The Subjunctive În mare, construcŃia subjonctivală şi cea cu indicativul sunt identice, singurul indiciu fiind faptul că la subjonctiv nu se adaugă terminaŃia –s pentru persoana III sg ; la timpul prezent verbul be ramâne be pentru toate formele, în timp ce la trecut are forma were. In most cases, subjunctive and indicative forms of a verb are the same - often you would not notice whether a verb is used in subjunctive or indicative mood. The only indicator for subjunctive is that no ‘s’ is added in 3rd person singular and that the verb be remains ‘be’ for all forms in present tense and becomes ‘were’ for all forms in past tense. XVII. 1. Utilizări Uses Subjonctivul apare în anumite expresii, cum ar fi formulele de felicitare (Subjonctivul formulaic) Subjunctive is used in some fixed phrases (formulaic subjunctive). Happy birthday/ Many (happy) returns of the day! ; Be that as it may; Cheers!; Bless you ! Anumite verbe (demand, insist, recommend, suggest) precum şi unele adjective (essential, important, vital) sunt însoŃite de ‘that’ + subjunctive (subjonctivul instrucŃional) pentru a indica faptul că ceva trebuie neapărat făcut (aspectul directiv). Certain verbs (e.g. demand, insist, recommend, suggest) and adjectives (e.g. essential, important, vital) are followed by ‘that’ + subjunctive (mandative subjunctive) to indicate that something must be done (directive aspect). Students demand that the hostel be opened before the start of the univeristy year. It is important that everyone register. Deoarece construcŃiile cu subjonctivul sună foarte formal, adesea se preferă construcŃia cu un auxiliar. În cazul în care aspectul directiv al propoziŃiei este suficient de clar şi fără auxiliarul respectiv, e sufcient să folosim forma de bază a verbului la modul indicativ. Sentences in subjunctive sound very formal, however, so often an auxiliary is preferred. If the directive aspect of the sentence is clear enough without an auxiliary, it is also possible to simply use the main verb in indicative mood. People demand that the troops are / should be withdrawn. 101 It is important that everyone registers. AtenŃie : În următoarele exemple se observă diferenŃa între construcŃile cu subjonctivul şi cele cu indicativul Note the difference of subjunctive and indicative in the following example. She insisted that she participate too = She wanted to participate too. (directive aspect; subjunctive) She insisted that Anna participated too. = She knew and wanted to persuade others of the fact tha Anna really was there. (observation; indicative) În exemplul de faŃă, subonctivul instrucŃional se foloseşte întotdeauna la infinitiv, chiar dacă se referire la o acŃiune trecută. În cazul propoziŃiilor negative, la subjonctiv nu se foloseste auxiliarul do. In the example above, you can also see that mandative subjunctive is always used in infinitive, even if we talk about a situation in the past. Note that in negative sentences, the auxiliary ‘do’ is not used for subjunctive mood. She insisted that he not be present. În cazul dorinŃelor şi speranŃelor nerealizabile (subjonctivul voliŃional), se foloseşte construcŃia de trecut a subjonctivului. Pentru toate verbele (exceptând verbul be) forma de trecut a subjonctivului este aceeaşi cu cea de la indicativ. For wishes and hopes that cannot be fulfilled (volitional subjunctive), subjunctive is used in past tense. For all verbs (except be) past tense in subjunctive mood is the same as in indicative mood. Past tense, subjunctive mood for ‘be’ is ‘were’. I wish I were better prepared for the exam. XVIII. Phrasal and Prepositional Verbs These are verbal constructions which consist of a base verb and particle which is either a preposition or an adverb. The meaning of such a verbal construction can be a combination of the meanings of the two words (come in, run away, go on, come through, fall apart). Sometimes, the base meaning is conveyed the verb while the preposition or adverb functions as an intensifier (put up (with), work out). In other cases, the new two-part verb has quite a different meaning from the two separate parts: give (renounce), take after (resemble), blow up (explode), carry out (finish), etc. 102 Type of verbal Characteristics Examples form 1. Phrasal verbs - Components: verb + word or phrase/particle (an adverbial, which can be a preposition with adverbial function) - meaning most often different from the initial meaning of the constituting We must call off the lexical elements - can be transitive (the two whole business as all our constituting parts can be separated by plans have fallen the direct object), e.g., bring up, call through/apart.. off, carry out/off, get over with, grow No, we just have to put it up, lock up, look up, make out, make off for a while, that’s all. up, turn on/off/up, put trough, put off, Look all the meanings up put (smb.) up tell off, throw away, in track down, try out, turn down, etc. the reference bibliography. Don’t throw these papers away yet. They were locked up in a room for two weeks. The kidnappers locked them up. - or intransitive: break off, break The couple broke off last down, bring abourt, bring up, count week. on, come up, count on, drop in, end I’m afraid you can’t count up, get along (with), get at, get on, on me in money matters; hang around, look into, point out , set lately I’ve been as poor as about, throw up, wear off/out, etc. a church none. 103 mouse have It’s ahrd to understand what you’re getting at. Be more explicit, will you? I’m sick. I think I’ll throw up. Just hang around for a while till I come back. The students all set about working on te project. 2. Prepositional Verb + preposition (it cannot be What is he thinking about? Verbs separated by the verb) You never look after - always have objects (get over the yourself. bridge) She nearly fell off the chair. Will you get into the house before you get wet? - the meaning of this tandem (verb + The boy walked across the classroom preposition) varies: to the - it can be a combination of the two blackboard. words’ meanings. I didn’t dare come in. Moreover, I ran away before he saw me. - the meaning of the verb is They can’t break up, they intensified by the preposition love each other too much. (=separate completely) - the new two-part verb has quite a We should have already different meaning from the two checked in. It’s late! 104 separate parts Mark doesn’t take after his parents at all. 3. Phrasal- verb + adverb + preposition It’s always good to get on Prepositional look forward to = anticipate with with Verbs pleasure (have a friendly relationship) your verb + adverb + colleagues, not just to put preposition up with (tolerate) them. We look forward to our next meeting. We ran out of fuel/it. XIX. TEXT ORGANISATION – STRUCTURE OF A TEXT XIX.1. Linking words and phrases Although some of these words have already been mentioned as sentence connectors, they can also be used to develop coherence within a paragraph, that is linking one idea / argument to another. Print off this page to keep as a reference of useful linking words and phrases. Type of connector Connecting word Example Sequence first / firstly, I shall have to make a second / secondly, rigorous plan regarding our third / thirdly etc enterprise. next, last, finally Firstly/First(of all) we will in addition, moreover sit down and find the best further / furthermore strategy… . another Next, we will appoint a also secretary… Then, we’ll find a manager… 105 Another step would be to… Result in conclusion It wasn’t so late to start it all to summarise over again. Therefore, we so agreed to meet as soon as as a result possible and … hence As a result, we managed to consequently get everything done in due as a consequence (of) time. therefore To thus conclusion, the merger turned summarize / In out to be a success. Emphasis undoubtedly indeed Their suggestion was obviously admittledly unsubstantial but generally Mary will undoubtedlycome admittedly up with a better one. In fact, in fact we have always relied on her. particularly / in particular especially clearly importantly Addition and Mary’s report turned out to in addition /additionally/ be exactly what we had all an additional point expected. In addition, she furthermore offered to write one for the also following session. too as well as Reason due to Due to the board’s constant because refusal to look into my since proposals, I will not try again 106 as because of Example for These are not what we call for example constructive for instance such as, for instance, your that is (ie) colleague’s. such as I will have to take into including account the needs of all our namely member’s, including those of contributions, their families’. Comparison Similarity Aviary flu is not at all similar similarly to any other viruses known si likewise far. also It likewise affects children like and adults, men and women just as alike. just like A protection campaign for similar to the population has already same as began. compare At the same time, a vaccine is at the same time expected to be put to use both soon. also too as well as Difference (contrast) (as ) compare(d) to / with … differs from in contrast to/ in comparison (to) on the one hand/ on the other On the one hand, school (hand) children will be inoculated 107 not only...but also with the latest vaccines on while the market, and on the other, but pregnant women will strictly yet be still basis. monitored on weekly whereas rather though Whereas/ While children will although / even though be inoculated with the latest however nevertheless vaccines nonetheless pregnant women, will strictly contrary (to)/ in contra be on monitored the on market, weekly conversely despite / in spite basis. of In spite of/despite/contrary the so far efforts, no definite conclusion has been reached. XX. Academic Language Skills A. Introductory considerations Using the academic register means achieving a formal, direct language and clear expression. When approaching texts that use this register, one should equally be able to recognise (when reading a text) and employ (when writing a text) certain stylistic ‘devices’ such as: - the use of the passive voice rather than the active and of nominalisation (nouns rather than verbs) The groups of researchers preferred an isolated venue (active voice) where they could hold (verbalization) the conference on inter- and outerspace contact exploration. An isolated venue was preferred by the groups of researcher (passive voice) for the interand outerspace contact exploration (nominalisation) 108 Also, the Centre for Independent Language Learning of Hong Kong Polytechnic University, suggests the following: - the use of tentative rather than assertive language (possibly and pobably in front of verbs and noun phrases: This is possibly due to the use of …... or It will probably result in … . - using the modal verbs may and might: This may be the cause of ….. - using appears to and seems to: This appears to have caused the extinction of … . - avoiding always and every, and replacing them with often and many/much - using formal vocabulary (employ rather than use) - using more formal grammar, for example: - avoiding short, disconnected sentences - avoiding the use of personal pronouns such as you and we to address the reader using One, There, It as the subject of the statement: One may rarely find a better facility than… . There are some further issues to be discussed ... ; It is highly convenient to... - avoiding the use of rhetorical questions : Can you imagine another means of reaching the same result? - avoiding the use of contractions such as won’t, didn’t, we’ll - avoiding the overuse and misuse of certain logical connectors, especially besides, furthermore and moreover. Besides is too informal, and both furthermore and moreover mean that the following information is more important than the information before, which is usually bad organisation. Use In addition or Also instead - ensuring that grammar is accurate, that ideas link together smoothly and that a full range of grammatical structures is employed, such as relative clauses - referencing correctly, in both in-text references and bibliographical references. (http://elc.polyu.edu.hk/cill/eap/academicstyle.htm) B. Using the Academic Writing Style 109 When writing, information, evidence and ideas, but must be incorporated into your work carefully. Quoting, paraphrasing and summarising are all different ways of including the works of others in your assignments. 1. Summarising – an indicator of the degree of one’s understanding of the proposed text Used lavishly in research activities, summarising is one of the most important academic skills, if not, indeed, the most important one. in note-taking ,in writing abstracts, an aid in writing both introductions and conclusions, in Applications collecting and collected information management, when referring to original texts, in ma frameworks (subject to further detailed analysis), for brief proposals or progress reports. It is a text-shortening operation to a maximum number of words/ a 10th of the source text. The gist of a (longer) text is preserved unaltered in its shortened version without copying e statements from the original text. - getting the the text’s main subject or purpose, usually in one sentence Steps - formulating the main ideas - including them in brief paragraphs, each based on only one issue or topic. - writing a paragraph to combine all the previous ideas/points. - restoring the general idea (gist) concisely and accurately in the new shorter text summary) without copying out parts of the original. Some extra tips Examples - the layout should be easy to read, with spaces between each note - always mention the source(s) Original text Summary Everyone hoped that the weeks of planning and preparation would prove to A number of be worthwhile. The summer fete was the most important fund raising activity attractions in the school calendar. Last year’s event had raised over $ 1500 which had perfect been spent on improiving the outside play area. This year, the organising weathercondi committee had set an ambitious target of $1800 with the aim of purchasing helped make muych needed sports equipment for the school. year’s Altogether fourty different stalls had been advertised. There were a fete 110 sum the number of exciting new activities, including pony rides and a bouncy castle, successful eve both of which were to be introduced for the first time. It was hoped that they record amoun would be as popular as some of the most traditional stalls like the coconut shy $1900 was ra and tambola. A large number of parents and children had offered their help The proceeds and the committee was confident that this would be the most successful fund be used to raiser to date. new s On the day of the fete the day was perfect. It was sunny, but not too hot, equipment fo and best of all, no rain had been forecast. The new attractions went down very school. well. There seemed to be a permanent queue of children waiting at the bouncy [38words] castle. The committee was absolutely delighted when the final takings were counted and announced as a record of $ 1900, exceeding all expectations. Following such an outstanding success, everyone agreed that it was worth all hard work and effort. (model worksheets: http://www.bbc.co.uk/skillswise/words/reading/summarising/worksheet.shtml) [237 words] C. Organising Text Organisational patterns have various functions: they provide a framework for connecting the main idea with details, provide variety to writing, and help writers assist their readers in understanding the logical development of ideas, staying on target and avoiding digressions. In academic writing, several organisational patterns can be used at the level of the paragraph and of the essay. 1. Defining Defining is one of the major functions in academic writing. Definitions of key words, phrases, as well as of terms used in academic writing are necessary in order to avoid misinterpretation. The general structure of a simple definition (used for concrete items) can be 111 Concept An anthropologist general is a/ an/ the form of/ species of + relative may be defined as general class word which/ who/ that is a person who special features is called/is known as concept studies people is called class relative pronoun: word which/ who/ that A person who pronoun: special features studies people an anthropologist Relative clauses are often used to give more information. On the other hand, in most academic pieces of writing, especially when dealing with abstract or complex concepts, we need to resort to extended definitions of terms, by giving examples of their use and/ or by stating their main characteristics. There will be obvious differences between a general dictionary definition and a specialized one, for example Sociology (n.) is the study and classification of human societies. (Source: http://wordnet.princeton.edu) Sociology is the study of human interaction and social organisation. (Consequently/ therefore) it is the science that studies patterned, shared human behaviour. Sociology is a social science that studies human societies, their interactions, and the processes that preserve and change them. It does this by examining the dynamics of constituent parts of societies such as institutions, communities, populations, and gender, racial, or age groups. Sociology also studies social status or stratification, social movements, and social change, as well as societal disorder in the form of crime, deviance, and revolution. (Source: sociology. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved October 25, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/551887/sociology 112 General meanings The term X has come to be used to refer Sociology has come to be used to refer to the ... study and classification of human societies. to The term X is generally understood to Sociology is generally understood to mean the … study mean of human interaction and social The term X has been applied to situations organisation. The broad use of the term sociology is where… In broad sociological terms, X can be sometimes defined equated with the study and as… classification of human societies. The broad use of the term X is sometimes equated with ... Indicating difficulties in defining a term: In the field of sociology, various definitions of In the field of X, various definitions of Y media are found. found. Media is a commonly used notion in journalism are Y is a commonly used notion in X’ and and yet it is a concept difficult to define yet it is a concept difficult to define precisely. A generally accepted definition of sociology is precisely. A generally accepted definition of Y is lacking. lacking. James (2006) identified four … that might be subsumed under the term Y: a) .. The term Y embodies a multitude of concepts. Stating terms that are used in an essay/thesis: In this essay the term media will be used in its In this essay the term Y will be used in its broadest sense to refer to all means of broadest sense to refer to ...... dissemination of fact, opinion, … such as… 113 Throughout this thesis, the term Y is used Throughout this thesis, the term media is used to to to… refer to what the general public terms as "the refer media,"… While a variety of definitions of the term While a variety of definitions of the term media X have been suggested, this paper will use have been suggested, this paper will use the the definition first suggested by James definition suggested by McLuhan (1964) who (1988) who saw as… saw it as “extensions of man.” it In this paper, the term that will be used to In this paper, the term that will be used to describe this phenomenon is X. describe this phenomenon is mass In this dissertation, the terms X and Y are communication. In this dissertation, the terms mass media and used interchangeably to mean… mass communication are used interchangeably to mean a means of public communication reaching a large audience. Referring to authors’ definitions: Smith (1954) was apparently the first to Marshall McLuhan (1967) was (apparently) the use the first to bring up the idea that “the medium is the ...... massage.” term X writes/ believes that “.....” (1957, p.11). G. L. Kreps and B. C. Thornton believe media extend "people's ability to communicate, to speak to others far away, to hear messages, and to see images that would be unavailable without media" (1992, p. 144). According to a definition provided by X (2001:23), Y is „......”. According to a definition provided by G. L. The term "…" is used by Smith (2001) to Kreps and B. C. Thornton (1992:144), media refer to ...... could be seen as an extension of "people's ability X (2001) uses the term "…" to refer to to communicate, to speak to others far away, to ...... hear messages, and to see images that would be For X (2001), … means/refers to ....... unavailable without media". … is defined by Smith (2003: 119) as 114 "......................" X defines … as "…." Adapted from: http://www.phrasebank.manchester.ac.uk/definitions.htm. Retrieved 22.08.2008 Sample paragraph: extended definition pattern (with signal words underlined) The sociologist, however, thinks of institutions in a deeper and broader sense than any meaning connoted in the examples cited. To him, an institution is an established pattern and framework of collective behaviour that exists to fulfil some basic and abiding human need. A social institution, as defined by Harry E. Moore, is an enduring, complex, integrated, organized behaviour pattern through which social control is exerted and by means of which the fundamental social desires or needs are met. Institutions are the major components of a culture and may be further defined as a complex of social patterns, roles, and relations which persons enact in certain standardized ways for the purpose of satisfying basic social needs. In this sense of the term, the sociologist distinguishes between the family institution, the religious institution, the educational institution, the government institution, and the economic institution 2. Describing1 I Position, weight, structure, colour, composition, size, shape, function Position The adjacent to/ alongside/ below/ beyond/facing house (diagonally)/ parallel to/underneath/ opposite/ in road is The tunnel The roof 1 the middle of/ on the right of/ on the left of/ near/ close to/ touching/ behind/ in front of/ under/ on top of/ above/ below/ level with/ diagonally above/ vertically below between/ equidistant from B and C. http://www.uefap.com/writing/writfram.htm 115 Examples • The road runs alongside the house. • The tunnel is under the road that is adjacent to the house. • The roof is on top of the house that is facing the road in front of it and also above the tunnel that is vertically below the road above it. Structure is nailed/ screwed/ fixed/ fastened/ linked/ to furniture by staples welded/ tied/ connected/ attached Wood nails Metal screws consists of Brick iron ore contains/ comprises/ includes alloys, carbon is held in place/ secured/ supported/ suspended by concrete, cement joined to mounted/ placed/ pivoted on Examples • Wood is generally fixed to furniture with joints; sometimes it may be nailed or screwed. • Metal cannot be nailed effectively; it is usually welded or screwed to other metals. • Bricks contain/ comprise clay and sometimes straw and mud only. Colour Black Shade Night green. is dark/ light/ pale/ bright/ dull when compared to… blue. red. yellow. 116 Grass Examples • At night the grass does not seem to be green as it is dark • In the shade, colours are not as bright as in sunlight; now they are dull. • Black is the darkest colour we know and yellow is one of the brightest. Composition A/An blend alloy metal./ steel./ aluminium./ an alloy of A and B./ cloth./ is made of silk./ china./ wood./ plastic./ glass./ assortment. mixture Examples • Sometimes a metal is a blend of metals known as an alloy. • Plastic and glass are usually clear and come in an assortment of colours. • Most structures today are a mixture of metal, wood and glass or plastic. Size and weight A pencil is 6 cm long/ high/ wide A cube is 6 cm in length/ height/ width/ diameter 6 Kg The length/ weight height/ of width/ diameter a small is 4 metres car weight 600 Kg. A table has a length/ width/ height/ diameter weight of 90 cm. 60 Kg. 117 A bag of potatoes weighs 10 Kg Shape A/An … is square/ round/ rectangular/ triangular/ in shape semi-circular/ conical/ spherical/ hexagonal/ octagonal/ oval/ circular/ irregular A/An … is is shaped like a square/ circle/ rectangle/ triangle/ semi-circle hexagon/ octagon A/An … is cubical/ cylindrical/ pyramidal/ spherical/ in shape tubular/ spiral/ hemispherical/ conical A/An … is bulbous/ tapering/ concave/ convex in shape. diamond-shaped/ kidney-shaped/ U-shaped/ star-shaped/ bell-shaped/ dome-shaped/ mushroom-shaped/ X-shaped/ crescent-shaped/ egg-shaped/ pear-shaped/ Y-shaped. Examples • A football is round and never square or triangular in shape. • A rectangle is measured in mass, and never shaped as tubular or like a pyramid. • An arc can take many shapes diamond, kidney, star or even bell shaped, arcs form arches for us to pass through. Function The function/ aim/ objective purpose of the thermometer is to measure tripod hold a beaker. The thermometer is used for measuring temperatures. tripod holding beakers. 118 temperature. Properties Copp light/ tough/ soft/ elastic/ malleable/ flexible/ (in)soluble/ a good (bad) er conductor is of electricity (heat)/ (not) corrosion resistant/ (non- )combustible/ transparent/ smooth/ heavy/ brittle/ hard/ plastic/ ductile/ Lead rigid/ opaque/ rough Glass II Describing Data In academic writing, you may have to present data in various ways, such as charts, graphs, and tables. Below, there is some of the basic vocabulary used to describe trends, express numerical values, as well as the standard format for the structure of the data commentary. Finally, lexis necessary in presenting data/ research findings in a cautious way is brought to attention. Verbs Adverbs Up Adjectives Noun increase, a rise, a Showing degrees of go up, take off, shoot change Showing degrees of growth, up, soar, increase, rise, dramatically, change improvement, grow, rocket, improve, considerably, dramatic, upturn, climb, escalate sharply, considerable, sharp, upsurge, upward significantly, significant, substantially, substantial, Down go/come down, fall, fall off, collapse, crash, drop, slump, plunge, slide, dip, decrease, slip, shrink decline, plummet, surge, trend moderately, slightly moderate, slight Showing speed of Showing speed change change abruptly, suddenly, abrupt, rapidly, of sudden, quickly, rapid, quick, steady, steadily, gradually, gradual, slow slowly 119 fall, decrease, decline, drop, downturn, downturn trend No remain stable, level off, stay at the same level, flatten off, remain constant, stagnate, change stabilise, hold steady At the reach a peak/ high, peak, top out top At the reach a low (point), bottom out bottom Recover pick up, bounce back, rally, recover Prepositions to increase by 50% / to fall by 30% a rise from $10 to $12 /an increase of 7.5 per cent over last year Examples of Describing Movement in Graphs 1. The market is showing some signs of growth. 2. The market is extremely volatile. 3. The pound slipped back against the dollar. 4. The Swiss franc is staging a recovery. 5. The lira lost ground slightly. 6. There's been a dramatic downturn in the market. 7. There's been an upsurge of interest in gold. 8. The share price bottomed out at 115p. 9. Sugar peaked at $400 a tonne. 10. Profits will level off at around $10,000. 11. Sales hit an all-time low. 12. There hasn't been much movement in the price of tin 120 Numbers The following table shows a number in different years (2000-2005): 2000 2005 2200 3300 You could describe the above table using numbers, fractions or percentages: The number went up by 600, from 2200 to 3300. (Number) The number went up by half, from 2200 to 3300. (Fraction) The number went up by 50%, from 2200 to 3300. Percentage) The number went up 150%, to 3300. (Percentage) 2002 2004 2006 2008 500 1000 3000 12000 Use "trebled," "-fold," and "times:" The number doubled between 2002 and 2004. The number trebled between 2004 and 2006. The number quadrupled from 2006 to 2008 There was a twofold increase between 2002 and 2004. The number went up sixfold between 2002 and 2006. The figure in 2006 was three times the 2002 figure. The figure in 2008 was four times the 2006 figure. 2002 2004 2006 2008 1000 800 400 100 Use Fractions: Between 2002 and 2004, the figure fell by one-fifth. Between 2004 and 2006, the number dropped by a half. The figure in 2008 was one-tenth the 2002 total. 121 Structure of Data Commentary2 A. location elements and/or summary statements B. highlighting statements C. discussions of implications, problems, exceptions etc. a. Location elements and/or summary statements Starting a Data Commentary Location Summary OR a. Table 5 shows Summary are shown in Table 5. The results of the results of the second provided in the Table 2. second b. Table 2 provides experiment. are are given in Figure experiment 4.2. c. Figure 4.2 gives Note 1: we can also use linking as-clauses. Pay attention to preposition use! As shown in table 5, home disks are the most frequent source of infection. As can be seen in figure 8, infant mortality is still high in urban areas. As revealed by the graph, the defect rate has declined. As shown by the data in table 1 As described on page 34 Note 2: Some of the most frequently used verbs are show, provide, give, present, summarise, illustrate, reveal, display, demonstrate, indicate, suggest. b. Highlighting Statements Highlighting statements are the central sections of data commentaries. They are generalizations that can be drawn from the details of the data display, such as trends or regularities in the data, more important versus less important findings, or data on which you can make appropriate strength. 2 Swales and Feak 1994: 80 122 c. Describing data: Degrees of Certainty In presenting data/ research findings or supporting arguments/ viewpoints, academic writers/ researchers need to be cautious and sometimes critical. Learning to become “confidently uncertain” is a slow but necessary process. Degree of Verbs Adverbs + It is + There is a + certainty/ adverbial (determiner) determiner + commitment phrases adjective possibility + that complete Is (not) Certainly It is certain Definitely It Clearly that is clear Will (not) Undoubtedly Must Actually (not) strong partial less strong can/cann probably It is almost There ot (is) certain could(not likely/unlikely It ) presumably (im)probable/ should possibly highly (not) perhaps (un)likely is very possibility that good definite may (not) that might It is probable/ slight (not) likely remote for to a certain/ limited extent (degree) introducing to some extent (degree) partially in a way (sense) correct this is partly true (but) there is some truth in (this) statements in some cases 123 a strong It is possible Phrases is up to a point Dealing with This discrepancy may be due to the small sample size. “imperfect” can be attributed to data can probably be accounted for by is probably a consequence of would seem to stem from People seem to have less confidence in the economy. appear to It would seem/ appear that people have less confidence in the economy. It is said that… Impersonal (i.e. no commitment of self) X reports that… There is evidence to suggest that… According to this preliminary study,… people have less confidence Based on informal observations (made by)… in the economy. In the view of some experts On the limited data available Generalisation - the verb tend People tend to have less confidence in the economy. - qualifying the subject A majority of people have less confidence in the economy. In most parts of the world People in most walks of life - adding exceptions With the exception of Apart from the administrative confidence Except for in the economy. - choosing a weaker verb 124 staff, people have less Caused (stronger) -> contributed to (weaker) - various phrases as a (general) rule, generally, in general, on the whole, by and large, in most cases Exception/ In the independent sentence exclusion Except (prep.) + NP/ Pron. (objective case) = with the exclusion of; other than No one except Laura knew about it. Everyone had come except her. Except (verb) Present company excepted. N.B. Except for= different from, apart from But I have finished all courses but one. Save I enjoyed the trip save the flight. Apart from Apart from her, I did not really enjoy the company. With the exception of With the exception of the children, all were told what to do. Bar/Barring The crop will be excellent bar/barring a disaster. Otherwise than Without In the sentence Except (conj.)=if it were not for the fact that; otherwise than I would buy the suit, except that it costs too much. They did not open their mouths except to complain 125 D. Classifying and Listing Classifying is an operation of grouping and naming things according to previously established criteria of what they have in common. Classification helps writers and readers alike to understand shared qualities and features as well as the differences between things. Along with definitions and listing (i.e. a series of items), classifications are used to present information systematically and/or in the order of importance. There are several ways of building up classifications and lists: General Classifications X may be (generally) three classes/ sub-groups/ divided into main types/ sorts X falls under two varieties/ headings categories/ There are of The X consists of/ comprises/ can be divided into X may be classified/ grouped according to Y (criterion/ criteria) into X’ and on the basis of X’’ depending on in terms of Specific Classifications In the U.S. system, X is graded according on to the whether ..... of ...... basis in terms of Smith (1966) divided Xs into two broad types: Xi’s and Xii’s classified 126 grouped Thomas Nelson and four basic types of validity: logical, content, criterion and construct. (1996) describe Sample paragraphs: classifying pattern (with signal words underlined) 1. In almost every society, marriage is recognized as the beginning of a new social group. There are three types of marriage: monogamy, polyandry, and polygyny. Monogamy is the marriage of one man to one woman. Polyandry permits the marriage of one woman to several men. Polygyny allows a man the option to take and maintain several wives. 2. The vast majority of children in Britain (87%) attend state schools, which provide compulsory education from the age of 5 to 16 years. These schools can be classified according to the age range of the pupils and the type of education provided. There are two types of school: primary and secondary, although in some areas there are also middle schools. Primary schools cater for children aged 5-11, and secondary schools for ages 11-16 (and in some areas up to 18). Primary schools can be sub-divided into infant schools (for ages 5-7) and junior schools (for ages 7-11).(…) When pupils reach the age of 16 there may be three choices open to them. Firstly, they may leave school. Secondly, they may stay on at school for two more years if it has a Sixth Form. Thirdly, they may transfer to a Sixth Form College or a Tertiary College. E. Comparing and Contrasting Identifying and understanding similarities and differences between two things usually involve a process of analysis, in which we compare the specific parts as well as whole. Comparison may also be a preliminary stage of evaluation so by comparing specific aspects of X and Y, we can decide which is more useful or valuable. This pattern may organise an essay as well as a paragraph. Comparison: Similarities Within sentence X is exactly/ the same as 127 Y with X and Y are precisely/ respect/ just/ regard/ virtually/ reference to practically/ almost/ in terms of nearly about quite very similar to that/ comparable those Compared with X, Both X and Y are There are a Y is In comparison number similaritie between X and Y in X and Y of/ several/ s two Numerous have studies compared Across sentences X is Similarly,/ expensive Likewise,/ to produce. Moreover,/ Y… In addition, /By the same token, Y, similarly,/ likewise, Americans and French are quite similar with respect to cultural stereotypes regarding each other. 128 Numerous studies have compared the intercultural stereotypes in the Americans and the French and found they are relatively similar. Both Americans and French are adamant about each other being arrogant and conceited or domineering, in the sense that they give lessons to others and do not take criticism. Americans see the French as arrogant and conceited, always giving lessons to others. Similarly, the French see the Americans as domineering, in other words not taking criticism from others. Contrast: Differences Within sentence X is contrasts unlike/ Y with respect to cost/size dissimilar/ etc different from with regard to/ in terms Y of price in that X is larger than with Y X and Y differ in many respects. are in every/each respect. different/ dissimilar X produces while/ whereas/ but/ although 500 in spite of While/ X produced 500, Y produced 700. producing 700 Y produced 700. whereas/ although/ in it is true that X produced 500, spite of the it cannot be denied that X fact that/ produced 500, Even though The main difference/One of the main is is that X...................., whereas differences between X and Y Y............. 129 X is a great deal XX are considerably bigger than Y. (very) much somewhat a little slightly hardly Across sentences X is difficult On the other hand, to produce. Y… However,/ In contrast,/ Conversely, On the contrary,/ Even so,/ Needless to say, Introducing other people’s opposing arguments Opponents of argue/ believe/ claim X… Y that Others oppose this viewpoint Many people strongly disagree Americans and French differ in many respects, such as their attitude to past, language, and social identity. Americans are different from French with respect to their attitude to the past. Whereas Americans base their social identity on the individual, the French prefer being members of a group. The French are more likely than Americans to value their past. The French are more likely to value their past than Americans. The main differences between Americans and French people come from education. According to psychoanalyst Pascal Baudry, schools help American kids become independent and autonomous while French kids learn the principle of authority. 130 According to psychoanalyst Pascal Baudry, schools help American kids become independent and autonomous. Conversely/ In contrast, French kids learn the principle of authority. Sample paragraph: Comparison and contrast pattern (with signal words underlined): There are more similarities between the French and the Japanese than with the French and Americans. In both France and Japan the relation with the authority principle, the individual and the group, and others are very similar. Likewise, the two countries have a long feudal history and are tradition-bound. On the other hand, the French and the American share a long-standing tradition of cultural stereotyping and clichés. F. Cause and Effect Understanding and suggesting solutions to problems is at the heart of much academic work. However, solutions cannot be suggested unless the problem is fully analysed, and this involves a thorough understanding of the causes and the effects. The cause may show what lead up to the event or idea – that is, what caused to become what it is now. The consequences of the event or idea are the effects of it. Cause or effect paragraphs are sometimes written separately; in this case, one paragraph will state the causes, and the other will give the effects. Often, though, both the cause and the effect are combined into a single paragraph. Some of the language that you may find useful for explaining causes and effects is listed below: VERBS Lack of adequate may resources cause/ can lead to poverty and injustice can result in can give rise to Much of the instability the stems from economic effects of the war Interpersonal community violence and caused by/ resulting from produced by/ stemming from poverty, ... NOUNS The most likely causes of X are poor diet and lack of health care. A consequence of chronic deprivation is a feeling of insecurity. Social advocacy is an important factor in helping people undo negative coping. 131 Many other variables have an influence on poverty levels. Another reason why Xs are considered to be important is that ... PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES A great number of people owing become poor to/ because as a result of/ due to of wrong economic policies. ADVERBIAL PHRASES Wrong economic policies thus/ thereby a great number of are often applied, people become poor. perpetuating the poverty cycle. SENTENCE CONNECTORS Many people encounter Therefore, they chronic deprivation. feeling Consequently, Because develop a of this, insecurity. of As a result (of this), Sample paragraph: cause and effect pattern (with signal words underlined) Until World War I, the United States had always been a debtor nation. The value of the goods and services we imported often exceeded the value of the goods we sold to foreigners, and foreigners were investing far more in the United States than Americans were investing in other countries. Thus we had to pay interest and dividends to investors abroad. During World War I, the situation was reversed. The war-torn nations of Europe needed U.S.goods, so our exports more than doubled, while the value of the goods we imported declined, By 1919 we had become a creditor nation – foreign nations owed more to the United States than the United States owed to them. This net credit position continued until 1985, at which time the United States once again became a net debtor nation. The value of our imports greatly exceeded the value of our exports, and foreigners were investing heavily in U.S. securities, largely because of the relatively high interest rates here. [Note: A chronological listing is also evident in this paragraph, but the cause and effect relationship of the events is the major emphasis.] 132 (Gordon, S.D., and George G.Dawson. Introductory Economics. 7th ed. Lexington: D.C.Heath. 1991. 433 G. Exemplifying and Illustrating Examples and illustrations are given to support the author’s claim (argument. They can also be used to help the reader/ listener understand unfamiliar or difficult concepts, which are then easier to remember. In their turn, students may be required to give examples to show they have understood a complex problem or a concept. In academic writing, many paragraphs show development from general statements to specific details or examples. Examples as the main information in a Examples sentence This is shown/ exemplified/ illustrated by… This is shown/ exemplified/ illustrated by the author’s choice of words. For example/ instance,… 'There are a number of rules you must abide by. For instance, you may not use the swimming pool unsupervised.' Several researchers wanted to prove this thesis. For example, … A key experiment shows/ exemplifies/ ‘Compulsory activity for over 50s job illustrates this. seekers. Experiment shows good start.’ By way of illustration, X (2004) shows… By way of concrete illustration Herbart A classic/ well-known example of this is… instances the common observation that the An example of this is the study carried out by properties of things exist only under external X (2005) in which… conditions. (Wikipedia) X illustrates this point/ shows this point clearly. This is shown by the following examples, … The following are examples of this: The following is a case in point: This can be illustrated briefly by… 133 Another example of what is meant by X is… … is a case in point. … institutions such as the family… Examples as additional information in a sentence ..., such as… …, for example… …, including... H. Clarifying/Explaining/Putting it in other words The lecturer will try to explain the meaning of difficult concepts. To do this he or she may repeat the information using different words. It is important to recognise that this is the same information expressed differently and not new information. In other words, /Or rather,/ That is to say,/ Basically/ To put it another way,/ If we put that another way,/ By which I mean/ Or you Foreign policy is the total involvement of the could say/ The point I'm making is /That is to American people with peoples and say,/ That is, /Namely,/ i.e./ That means am What I That means that, if we are to achieve a new suggesting am trying to say meant to say governments abroad. standard of leadership, we must think in the is total context of our situation. should have said Let me put it another way. The Argumentative/ Discursive Essay 134 The function of an argumentative essay is to show that a writer’s assertion (opinion, theory, and hypothesis) about some issues is correct or more truthful than others' relating to the same/similar topic. Notice should be made that writers do not have to completely prove their point. Actually, they should only convince reasonable readers that their argument or position has merit; i.e., that it is somehow more accurate and complete than competing arguments. There are two main types of argumentative essays, which are often organised in a 6-paragraph format presented in the table below: For and against Opinion Authors present both sides of an issue, Authors present their personal opinion, discussing points in favour or against, clearly stated and supported by reasons and/or or the advantages and disadvantages of examples. a particular question. Introduction Introduction Paragraph 1 Paragraph 1 State topic (without stating your State the topic and your opinion opinion) Main body Main body Paragraphs 2 – 3 Paragraphs 2 –4 Arguments for and justifications, Viewpoints and reasons/examples examples or reasons Paragraphs 4 – 5 Paragraph 5 Opposing viewpoint and reason/example Arguments against and justifications, 135 examples or reasons Conclusion Conclusion Final paragraph Balanced consideration or opinion Final Paragraph Summarise/restate your opinion Useful Tips for Writing Essays When writing a discursive essay, you should: use formal, impersonal style use topic sentences to introduce the subject of each paragraph write well-developed paragraphs, giving reasons/examples use generalisations use sequencing (e.g. First/ly, Second/ly, etc) and linking words/phrases (e.g. however, although, etc) make references to other sources (e.g. Experts have proved that…) use quotations, either word-for-word or in paraphrase, being careful to identify the source You should not: use short forms, informal/colloquial language, etc use very emotional language (e.g. I absolutely hate people who…) express personal opinions too strongly (e.g. I know…); instead, use milder expressions (e.g. All politicians are…) refer blindly to statistics without accurate reference to their source (e.g. “A recent study showed…” – which study?) use clichés use personal examples Compare and contrast 3 essay-structures 2. First do one idea, and then Compare and contrast ideas by treating one idea thoroughly 1. First compare, then Focuses on the comparison and contrast instead of on the two do the other. before taking up the second one. contrast (or vice versa). ideas being compared and contrasted. 136 3. Only compare or only Writers who only compare two ideas sometimes briefly contrast. mention the contrast in the introduction and then move on so that they do not lead readers to think they cannot make relevant distinctions. Writers who only contrast ideas sometimes briefly summarize similarities in the conclusion so they do not leave the impression that they are thinking in opposites. Cause and Effect Pattern Introduction of general topic Specific areas to be covered Essay section A (Causes) Cause 1 a) subsection b) subsection Cause 2 a) subsection b) subsection Essay section B (Effects) Effect 1 a) subsection b) subsection Effect 2 a) subsection b) subsection Effect 3 a) subsection b) subsection Conclusion 137 Summary of main points (and look to future) Classification Essay 1. Sort things into useful categories. 2. Make sure all the categories follow a single organising principle. 3. Give examples that fit into each category. 138 Useful expressions and linking words/phrases Conclusion expressing balanced considerations/opinion indirectly it can/must be said/claimed that … In conclusion, it seems/appears that … On balance, it would seem that … All things considered, it is likely/unlikely/possible/foreseeable that Taking everything into account/ it is clear/obvious that … consideration, there is no/little doubt that … To conclude, the best course of action would be to… To sum up, achieving a balance between … would be… All in all, it is true to say that … Finally/Lastly, although it must be said that … it may be concluded/said that … All things considered, the obvious conclusion to be drawn is that … There is no absolute answer to the question of … In the light of this evidence, it is clear/obvious that … In conclusion, clear/apparent All in all, it is To sum up, evident above evidence plain/obvious from the foregoing points arguments Conclusion expressing opinion directly In conclusion, On balance, it is in my belief/opinion that … All things considered, I (firmly) believe/feel/think that … Taking everything into account/ I am convinced that … consideration, I am inclined to believe that … To conclude, I (do not) agree that/with … 139 To sum up, All in all, Taking everything in to account, I therefore conclude/feel/believe (that) … For the above-mentioned reasons, therefore, I (firmly) believe that … * Appendix: * * Lista Verbelor Neregulate cel mai frecvent utilizate List of most frequently used Irregular Verbs Infinitive (base form) Past Simple Past Participle be was/were Been become became become begin began begun bend bent bent blow blew blown break broke broken bring brought brought begin began begun build built built burn burnt/burned burnt/burned buy bought bought can could could/been able to catch caught caught choose chose chosen come came come cost cost cost cut cut cut do did done 140 draw drew drawn dream dreamt/dreamed dreamt/dreamed drink drank drunk/drunken drive drove driven eat ate eaten fall fell fallen feel felt felt find found found fly flew flown forget forgot forgotten get got got/gotten give gave given go went gone grow grew grown have had had hear heard heard hit hit hit hold held held hurt hurt hurt keep kept kept know knew known lay laid laid lead led led learn learnt learnt leave left left lean leant leant lend lent lent let let let lie lay lain light lit lit lose lost lost make made made 141 mean meant meant meet met met must had to had to pay paid paid put put put read read read ring rang rung run ran run say said said see saw seen sell sold sold send sent sent show showed shown sing sang sung sink sank sunk/sunken sit sat sat sleep slept slept spend spent spent stand stood stood steal stole stolen swim swam swum take took taken teach taught taught tear tore torn tell told told think thought thought throw threw thrown understand understood understood wake woke woken wear wore worn weep wept wept win won won 142 withdraw withdrew withdrawn write wrote written 143