Minstry of higher and secondary specialized education of the republic of uzbekistan


Download 37.6 Kb.
bet11/17
Sana18.12.2022
Hajmi37.6 Kb.
#1029925
1   ...   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   ...   17
Bog'liq
Xolboyeva Umida Lexicology Course Paper (1)

There is no wrong and right
We must avoid the temptation to draw false conclusions about "correct" and "incorrect" grammar. Northern and Southern dialects are more regular than Standard English and follow a pattern for every other verb—I played, I played, I went, you went, and so on.
Linguists therefore distinguish between standard and non-standard grammar, where standard English refers to what most people consider to be the authoritative form because it is used by mostly competent people and is generally accepted as the written norm.
Just as speakers with broad accents do not reflect their written pronunciation, most people whose speech is characterized by non-standard grammar tend to shift to more standard forms in writing. However, there is a huge difference between written and spoken language in terms of purpose and audience, and this is reflected in their different grammars.
and mother used to take me to school and then go up to the Co-Op up in the village and when her come back with her groceries her’d go back down the Tenbury Road to find me looking over the gate a mile-and-a- half away — I used to run away from school; couldn’t bear it
This sentence uses an interesting non-standard pronoun: the personal pronoun, her, is in the subject position. There is considerable variation in the use of pronouns across regional dialects, although Standard English has a strict distinction between the subject and object pairs I/me, he/him, she/her, we/us, and they/them.
For example, in standard English we can say I saw him, but he saw me. In the traditional dialects of the West Midlands and the West Country, the contrast is not always clear, and constructions such as I gave it to him or we went out yesterday can be heard, isn't it? The East Anglia newspaper is traditionally using the neuter procusal before the neuter, as in tomorrow morning, as I heard on the radio.
I was a back-seat passenger in a car accident, so I was
This speaker uses verb phrases that reinforce the information given in the main body of influence. Tags are used to turn phrases into questions, for example you are common to all dialects of English, including Standard English, but accent tags are less common.
The use of these tags is common in Northern Ireland, while in the North of England you will often hear inflectional verb phrases such as she is a good dancer, Katy, or simply an emphatic pronoun at the end of a sentence, e.g. As I play football, I.

Download 37.6 Kb.

Do'stlaringiz bilan baham:
1   ...   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   ...   17




Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling