EUPHRATES Funded by the European Union EUPHRATES Call for applications guidelines 1st Cohort Extension of the deadline to 07th February 2014 Deadline for applying: From 17th December 2013 until 30th January 2014 1. INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................ 2 2. GENERAL ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS ............................................................ 2 3. TARGET GROUPS.......................................
Premium Academic degree European Union
Online Instructor Addendum Section 1: Course Information Course Id: HSM415 Course Name: Threats to Homeland Security Term: WI14 Instructor: Lisa Davenport Contact Information: 717 991-0289 (please do not call after 8:30 p.m.) Office Hours Upon Request Section 2: Course Overview This course will analyze the history and many dimensions of national security before and after 9/11. It will also provide a comprehensive and interdisciplinary critique of the concepts of threats
Premium Bulletin board system Internet
UNIVERSITY House # 64/B‚ Road # 18 Banani Model Town Banani‚ Dhaka-1243 B A (Hons) in English 1. Objective: The course aims at students’ obtaining a comprehensive understanding of English Literature and at the same time‚ paying considerable attention to his or her communication skills. It is‚ therefore‚ a compilation of Literature and Language courses. The objective of this curriculum is to guide a student‚ in a step-by-step manner‚ to reach him/ her to a level of literary expertise
Premium English language Linguistics Second language acquisition
Lecture 1 The importance of studying theoretical grammar English is generally acknowledged to be the world’s most important language. Why? 1) One criterion is the number of speakers of English‚ which is more than three hundred million‚ and English ranks well below Chinese. 2) The second is the geographical dispersal of the language. 3) The third criterion is that it is the language of Shakespeare 4) English is a language of powerful‚ productive and influential nations
Free Linguistics Grammar
DEDUCTIVE AND INDUCTIVE GRAMMAR TEACHING By Arnis Silvia (arnis.silvia@gmail.com) I. Introduction: What is Grammar Teaching and Why? In traditional setting‚ grammar teaching is seen as the presentation and practice of discrete grammatical structures. More comprehensively‚ Ellis1 (2006) defines grammar teaching as: Grammar teaching involves any instructional technique that draws learners ’ attention to some specific grammatical form in such a way that it helps them either to understand it
Premium Language acquisition Linguistics Language education
[pic] |Course Syllabus College of Humanities COM/220 Research Writing | |Copyright © 2011‚ 2009‚ 2007 by University of Phoenix. All rights reserved. Course Description Students focus on gathering research‚ evaluating and documenting sources‚ and developing a major research paper. Selected readings prompt discussion regarding bias‚ rhetorical devices‚ arguments‚ and counter arguments. Grammar exercises address commonly confused sets of words‚ modifiers‚ parallel structure‚ sentence variety
Premium Vermiform appendix Rhetoric Source
Tutorial Time: Mon/Tue/Wed. 16.15 – 17.05 Email: grimes@encs.concordia.ca Office : EV-2.253. Phone: Ex 5447 Office Hours: Mon. 16.00 – 17.00; Tue. & Thu. 16.15 – 17.15. Course Description ENCS 272. Three-credit course. ENCS 272 teaches the fundamentals of English composition and argumentation: grammar; reasoning and persuasion; persuasive proofs; argumentation; structuring and outlining; the problem statement; the body; and the conclusions. Engineers and computer scientists develop
Free Writing
Common English Usage and Grammar Errors Please do not make the following common errors (for a complete list‚ please see http://www.wsu.edu/ ~brians/errors/errors.html): Possessive Pronouns it its (not it’s‚ a contraction of it is; note: there is no such word as its’) you your (not you’re‚ a contraction of you are) they their (not they’re‚ a contraction of they are) who whose (not who’s‚ a contraction of who is) Other Common Errors everyday (adjective) vs. every day (noun) lead (present
Premium English language Present tense Past tense
Masaryk University in Brno Pedagogical Fakulty Department of English Teaching Grammar at The Basic Schools according to The Framework Educational Programme Bachelor Thesis Brno 2006 Supervisor: Author: PhDr. Helena Havlíčková Jarmila Šabatová I. THEORETICAL PART 1. Introduction
Premium English language Language education Education
REVIEW NOTES FOR FINAL GRAMMAR QUIZ English 170/1 – Joe Benge Here is an outline of the content of your final grammar quiz. Correct all the examples in each section and bring this sheet to the next class. Questions 1-6 FINDING SUBJECTS AND VERBS On the answer sheet‚ for each of these sentences‚ write the main subject(s) in the first blank and the main verb(s) in the second blank. Careful – beware of prepositional phrases or dependent clauses that might lurk in between the real subject and
Premium Sentence Clause