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. - . : -nik, -alia, -rium, -eratti, -n.
, -ster, -wise.
,
-age, -er, -ese. .
: . . , , :
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1) , : a-, de-, dis-, ex-, in-, non-, tin-;
2) : be-, demi-, multi-;
3) : ante-, pre-, post-;
4) : mega-, micro-, mini-;
5) : mid-, supra-, sub-.
, : super-, extra-, under-, over-.
, .
: - b- , .
, , , - .
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7. .
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8. .
() - , , , , . .; , - .
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, , . : V + Adv, V + N.
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I
:
an umbrella 1) ; 2) ; 3)
sophisticated 1) (.) ; 2) ,
mafia
summit 1) ; 2)
:
slums ghetto inner city.
bubble-headed
air-brained -
:
AIDS
UFO -
saucerman
spacebike
telework ,
telecommuter , , ,
:
perfol ( oleum )
to wee ( , )
zizz (. ) ( , )
yeck / yack ,
rah-rah
:
dolce vita (.)
karoshi , (.)
Lunohod (.)
zazen (.)
:
gliding time (.)
photonovel
dialogue of the deaf ,
(.)
() :
A-bomb ();
baby-moon ()
to baby-sit ( )
go-go ( ) ()
sit-in ()
youthquake ()
() :
to splash down ( )
round table ,
:
:
to clockwatch
ski-extreme - ( ,
)
passrate
resthome -
someplace - -
down-deep -
deadpan -
nohow
high-rise -
in-thing - ,
be-in ,
shutdown
:
biblioklept
Francophilia -
acrophobe - ,
agoraphobia -
multilingual - ,
paramilitary
multimarket -
:
all-or-none
off-the-wall - ,
do-or-die
here-and-now -
free-for-all -
next-to-last -
wall-to-wall - ( )
under-the-counter - ,
straight-from-the-shoulder -
up-to-the-minute -
hand-in-glove -
one-on-one -
:
:
ear-minded
word-watcher - ,
body-builder -
:
stereophonic
:
Euromarket
stick-at-it-ive -
stick-to-it-ive - ( )
matter-of-factly -
٨ :
:
minidress -
minibreak - ,
maxi-taxi -
apartmate (apartment mate) -
pop-mobility -
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Eurotunnel -
to telecast -
teletext - , ,
telemarketing -
dramacom - - ( comedy)
toytoon - ( cartoon)
fishburger -
healthburger - ,
:
medivac (medical evacuation)
fembot (feminine robot) - ,
:
Medicare (medical care)
seaquarium (sea aquarium)
slanguage - ( slang + language)
chunnel (channel + tunnel) -
videolog (videofilm + catalogue) -
:
:
airbus
shipskin
shelflife
shoptalk
:
too-too -
boo-boo - ,
no-no - ,
jim-jam - ,
zigger-zagger -
clap-trap -
hokey-pokey - ,
to chin-chin -
to jobhop -
to shilly-shally -
blah blah blah -
Tut-tut! - !
:
can-do -
make-up ,
sign-on
follow-up -
headfirst
switch-over
back-out
rain-out , -
feed-in -
write-off
count-down
to frontpage - -
to mickey-mouse -
to nick-el-and-dime -
:
to fingerprint
to aircondition - to
:
brawn-drain ( brain-drain
waste-free
queue-happy -
energy-intensive -
look-alike - , -
sound-alike - , - ,
job-oriented -
earthquake-proof
space-sick -
audience-friendly -
:
gangdom -
fandom - , -
testee ,
appointee - ,
standee - ,
motherese - ,
leatherette -
featurette -
beaverette -
adulthood -
goodie -
oceanics
parenting -
drugster
funster - ,
doomster - , ,
folknik
completenik - ,
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numeratti - ,
foreseeable -
saleable -
prestigious - ,
snobbish -
kissy -
chancy - ,
hopefully -
redly - ,
communitywise - ,
noonish -
sevenish -
catastrophize -
professionalize -
itemize -
diversify -
liquify -
:
counter-culture -
underpopulation -
revegetation -
re-examination -
self-abuse -
:
D-Day -
E-Day -
three-D
e-mail (electronic mail (1977) -
e-money - smart cards
:
to wee
zizz
yeck / yack ,
rah-rah
:
shock-frock
II
:
1. wants his own way - I know what your fine words work down to business. I call it bossiness.
2. To accomplish this, Birdsong employed a small army of university students as canvassers, and Nancy had managed to locate several - now ex-students - who had worked for him.
4. The police went first and adhesive-taped the victim's mouth.
5. The Ecology Party yesterday launched its elective manifesto calling for a massive decentralization of power from Westminster and a back-to-the-land policy.
6. There was a new project ahead of them at the moment, code-named Farstar.
7. I had expected the chi-chi accent, so unmistakable, so charming.
8. He watched with amusement as sullen hurried figures pushed past him, and the trim legs of stenographers clip-clipped ever faster along the sidewalks.
9. The phone office was a log cabin and there was a booth in the corner, with a coin-in-the-slot telephone.
10. "Also we are consumer-oriented. " he said.
11. "I own a record shop, where the beatniks buy rock-and-roll, I got an interest in a drive-vourself car rental," he said.
12. At that moment his heart, barren of any object of attention, was ready open to hero worshipping.
13. She started to climb herringboning up the slope alongside the course.
14. She was having a lay-in which meant she would be down by half past six.
15. He would pitch headfirst into the sea and sink from sight.
16. Walking on down the corridor Mason latch-keyed the door to his private office.
17. For the first time science was peering deeply into sociobiology of insects.
18. A balance was necessary, a middle-of-the-way was imperative, lest man become either a ranging beast or a shadowy evil, plotting behind the doors of banks.
19. While he was at the college he had take up skydivin g and had made twenty-five free-falls, had surfed up and down in all sorts of weather and tried some scuba diving.
20. The President will be videotaping his address to the nation for this evening's television broadcast.
21. Throughout cities and suburbs in offices, stores and homes, six million electric air-conditioners hummed.
22. I got this piece of money by working hard for it. I'm not planning to chuck it away on any airy-fairy, artsy-craftsy nonsense.
23. In front of them was a huge screen - some public-relations man had christened it " Iconorama " - which showed everything moving in the air over the continent.
24. The in-car computer will modify most of our instruments.
25. This year's trip was their most ambitious from Miami to Haiti, island-hopping through Bahamas on their way.
26. Outside, he was surprised to find several TV reporters with mini-cameras awaiting him. 27. The college would be aimed at 15-19-year-olds, and employ multimedia teaching at a distance - including broadcasting -with face-to-face tuition.
28. What a little mystery-monger you are!
29. He also resented - as one of the Hotel's most consistent nine-to-fivers - the idea of working all night.
30. Several delegates were table-hopping, greeting friends in their section of the
room.
31. "This town," he said, "was overrun by hordes of publicity-hungry folk who are dying to be interviewed."
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32. Throughout cities and suburbs in offices, stores and homes, six million electric air-conditioners hummed.
33. I got this piece of money by working hard for it. I'm not planning to chuck it away on any airy-fairy, artsy-craftsy nonsense.
34. The in-car computer will modify most of our instruments.
7. His micro-surgical experiments established the existence of such a substance, a hormone. distance - including broadcasting -with face-to-face tuition.
20. "This town," he said, "was overrun by hordes of publicity-hungry folk who are dying to be interviewed."
21. We got a contra-sedative in her. She'll wake up hungry.
22. For years I did what I could " to de-dramatize " relations between Jane and her father.
23. We often make important moves in our life in de-individualized condition. We feel suddenly that we are typifying something.
24. This man, a youngish ex-Fellow of a Cambridge College, had been standing on the front steps. 25. I still retain some of boxing reflexes I guess - although I haven't done any boxing for years. "Amateur?" Mason asked. - " Interco llegiate. I was champion of the light heavyweight division."
26.The poor man sounded even more depressed, as though the in valuableness of Mr Bagget was a secret grief to him.
27. "Hallo," he said thinking he could write a thesis on the use of the phone in non-business life. 28. The small orchestra played non- dance music until the entree had been served.
29. As more schooling becomes essential for more people the importance of counteracting over-intellectualit y becomes greater too.
30. They were each to make statements for the department on the same day, Gibly in the Lords. Roger in the Commons, (the House of Lords, the House of Commons)
31. "What's MARS?" Woods wanted to know. "Military Affiliate Radio System," the officer returned. "It served as a semi-public radio network between military bases in the USA."
32. He looked up from some complicated doodling on a memo pad, lumbered to his feet and greeted us with a huge handshake and a wide grin, (memorandum)
33. "Has Freddy decided about the panto?" Arthur asked, (pantomime)
34. "How many years?" - "Three in the pre-med. four in medical school, two more as an intern. Who had that much money?" - "Forget it." (pre-medical school)
35. Ann, poor girl, was wearing a disastrous billowing yellow organdy dress, too short for her long legs, making her look gawky, like a high school junior dressed for her first prom, (promenade)
36. Most of the time they were silent, listening to the music he played for her on the cassette, (videocas-sette player)
37. This was the first attack during the two-month-old rail strike after numeral parcel bomb attacks on trains and rail stations, (railway)
38. TOPS courses run in colleges of further education were designed for vocational needs of adults, cutting much of the liberal studies and time dedicated to growing up. (Training Opportunities)
39. Did you know there is a danger that the Video Recording Bill, now being debated as a measure to legally curb sex and violence on home video, could be used for political censorship? (video cassette recorder)
40. Running a two-bit ski school in the winter, occasionally getting some VIP fat cat, like a senator or president of some oil company, down the slope was rather profitable, (a Very Important Person)
1. .. . .: -, 2003.
2. .. . .: , 2003.
3. ..; . .. . .: , 2003.
4. .., .. . .: , 1981.
5. .. - . - .: , 2006.
6. .., .. - . - .: , 2000.
7. . . // . 2005. 2 C. 74 78.
8. Dictionary of Contemporary English Longman, 2008.
9. http://www.wikipedia.org
10. http://www.longman.com
11. http://www.lingvotech.com