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THE WOMAN GIVES HER OPINION OF THE PROPOSED CHANGE TO THE
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THE WOMAN GIVES HER OPINION OF THE PROPOSED CHANGE TO THE
FINALS SCHEDULE. STATE HER OPINION AND THE REASONS SHE GIVES FOR HER OPINION. Page 411 [ mp3 182-183] LPREP IBT 3 E AudioScript 115 Question 3. Listen to the passage. Then respond to the question. (Professor) : I’d like to talk today about some of the formal grammar rules in English, rules about what’s considered formally correct and incorrect. I’d like to talk in particular about rules that were formed in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries during the period of neoclassicism. Now during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in Europe, there was a widely held view that the cultures of ancient Greece and Rome were superior to the culture of the day. This period in the seventeenth and eighteenth century is known as the neoclassic period. Now during the neoclassic period, academics held the view that the Latin language of the classic age of the Roman Empire was the purest language possible; as a result, there was an attempt to Latinize the English of the time to make it resemble what was considered the most perfect language, Latin. An example of a formal grammar rule that developed in English during the neoclassic revival is the rule against split infinitives. The infinitive is the form of the verb that includes the word “to” and the base form of the verb, such as “to go,” or “to walk,” or “to make.” There’s a formal rule today in English against splitting the infinitive, against saying something like “to never go,” or “to always work,” though many native speakers of English do break this formal rule all the time. Another supposed rule of English is the prohibition on ending a sentence in a preposition. So you’re supposed to say “Sam is the man to whom I spoke” or “From where are you?” instead of “Sam is the man I spoke to.” or “Where are you from?” The rule against split infinitives and the rule against prepositions at the end of sentences didn’t exist before the neoclassic period. Instead, they came about as seventeenth and eighteenth century academics during that period noted that it was impossible to split infinitives in Latin—the reason being that a Latin verb is one word rather than the two words— and that in Latin prepositions never come before their objects. Because these two things – both natural features of English – because they never happened in so-called “perfect” Latin, rules against splitting infinitives or dangling prepositions were created. English speakers still, however, regularly violate both rules; the attempt by seventeenth and eighteenth century academics to impose rules in order to make English more like Latin did not succeed entirely. Now answer the following question. You have 20 seconds to prepare an answer and 60 seconds to give your spoken response. Download 0.63 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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