.


:




:

































 

 

 

 





. . :

Put another way, the conclusion is quite obvious.

, .

Strictly speaking, the author is not right here.

, ,

.

1. Turning now to other sources, we come upon groups of words of very various kind.

2. Speaking somewhat inexactly, it may be said, that a language is the product of the thought of a nation, and reflects its corporate character.

3. Rightly understood, it follows that all attempts to connect particular types of linguistic morphology

13 to do without .

14 iron pyrites , .

15 al-Kindi [al'kindi] ibn-al-Haythana [eelhaitene] .


with certain correlated stages of culture development are vain.

4. Coming back to general usage, there is a form of slang which consists of cutting down and abbreviating long words, or using their initials, as when one says maths for mathematics.

5. Broadly considered, words may be divided, according to use, into two great classes.

6. As already observed, the work under consideration 16 is not primarily linguistic in nature and does not introduce new linguistic data.

17. I + AS IT DOES (DO, DID) II + AS IT IS (ARE, WAS, WERE)

: , , ... ( ...):

These finds, dealing as they do with the applied art, will be described in detail in the next chapter.

, ( ) , .

, .

1. Pushkin's heroine, Tatiana, belonging as she did to a provincial family, had no English, though she quite certainly had had a French governess just before the curtain of the romance gently rose.

2. Even Herodotus and Plato, far removed as they are from us in point of time, are immeasurably nearer to Modern Englishmen in all their ideas, sentiments, and moral standards, than the Japanese of fifty years ago.

3. The figure of the heroine herself is decidedly original, differing as it does from all former dramatic conceptions of the Maid of Orleans.17

16 under consideration , .

l7 The Maid of Orleans , .


4. But as a matter of fact, the impression produced by these linked verses is delightful in the extreme, passing as they do before the reader like a series of dissolving views, vague, graceful, and suggestive.

5. This monument is not well placed. Standing as it does in the bend of Broadway, where the tide of traffic surges about it, and having for a background a jagged range of sky-scrapers, the monument does not show to advantage from any point of view.

6. The tragical History of Dr. Faustus is his masterpiece, containing as it does, passages of poetry which even Shakespeare has not excelled.18

7. This work was published in 1884, and it must have made an instant appeal to Oscar Wilde. The strange character of the hero, founded as it was upon the living original of Count Robert de Montesquieu, must have seemed to the young Englishman the incarnation of his own ideas.

8. As the hot July morning advanced the Crusaders 19 began to doubt whether they could hold out against the ceaseless rain of missiles. But, surrounded as they were, flight was impossible and surrender would mean captivity and slavery.





:


: 2015-10-27; !; : 388 |


:

:

,
==> ...

1734 - | 1603 -


© 2015-2024 lektsii.org - -

: 0.009 .