"English slang" Essays and Research Papers

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    idioms occurs due to the lack of understanding the figure of speech. For example‚ since “sick as a dog” implies that someone is very ill the misunderstanding usually occurs when someone or some other culture group‚ that is not native to speaking English‚ are unable to point out the expression that is being made. Analogy‚ the resemblance in some particulars between things otherwise unlike (Merriam-Webster‚ 2013). An example of an analogy would be by saying‚ “green is to go as red is to stop” and

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    Jamie Oliver Essay

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    sign of nervousness‚ in this case I think the pauses help Oliver to appear normal‚ like his viewers‚ so they are more likely to attempt his recipes and‚ of course‚ buy his books. Jamie Oliverâs Esturary accent and his accompanying use of London slang are also distinctive features of his talk. Words such as âchivvyâ and âsquiggleâ are colloquial and are not words we expect to hear on a cooking programme. We are used to words from the cooking semantic field such as âwhiskâ‚ âbakeâ‚ âstirâ but Oliverâs

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    English

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    a complex sentence‚ a Senate committee is believed to have found. (The Age‚ 13 September 2007) Nothing unites a country more than its common language because from a language comes a history and a culture. (John Howard quoted in Migrants to sit English test‚ ABC Online‚ 11 December 2006) Linguists suggest that some people deliberately choose a low status accent as a way of invoking prestige‚ although this is less common amongst women than men. The Australian-born children of migrants from Europe

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    A&P Character analysis-Sammy Sammy‚ the narrator of “A&P‚” is an opinionated‚ sarcastic‚ disaffected teenager with a healthy interest in the opposite sex and a keen observational sense. Sammy notices everything around him‚ and he drinks in every detail of the girls’ physical appearance‚ from the texture and patterns of their bathing suits to the different boundaries of their tan lines. Sammy goes beyond the surface details to glean insights about the people he observes. For example‚ Queenie’s dangling

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    No Sugar-Language

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    characters and present the issues regarding the discrimination of aborigines during the Great Depression. Davis uses a range of different types of languages techniques in the play "No Sugar"‚ which include the Nyoongah language‚ formal English‚ informal English‚ and tone to shape the readers response. The native Nyoongah language is used frequently throughout the play by the aborigines to show their defiance and resilience to the white culture thrust upon them. After being taken from their homes

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    Comprehension – Multiple choice Read the passage below and answer the set questions Unit 1A. Text B. Apps transform cellphone users into citizen scientistsJust a few years ago‚ coming back from an early morning hike with some pretty photos was about as productive as you could get. Now‚ new mobile apps make it easy for nature lovers to contribute to science too.Sophie Gerrick‚ a fourth year student at UCLA uses an app called Project Budburst to monitor trees as the seasons change.“We’re at

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    English

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    ENGLISH English is a West Germanic language that was first spoken in early medieval England and is now the most widely used language in the world. It is spoken as a first language by the majority populations of several sovereign states‚ including the United Kingdom‚ the United States‚ Canada‚ Australia‚ Ireland‚ New Zealand and a number of Caribbean nations. It is the third-most-common native language in the world‚ after Mandarin Chinese and Spanish It is widely learned as a second language and

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    What makes the selected speeches worthy of critical study? Margaret Atwood’s Spotty-Handed Villainesses (1994) and Anwar Sadat’s Statement to the Knesset (1977) are both speeches worthy of critical study because of their fascinating ideas and values. “There was a little girl Who had a little curl Right in the middle of her forehead; When she was good‚ she was very‚ very good‚ And when she was bad‚ she was horrid!” Atwood begins her speech with an anecdote and quotes this famous nursery

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    Good morning sir and fellow students. Significant events are pivotal in enriching ones understanding of their identity‚ which leads to an understanding of where they belong in the world. This is shown through our prescribed text “The Simple Gift” composed by Steven Herrick; as well as Tim Winton’s “The Turning”. | Steven Herrick’s free verse novel explores this value of events that shape a persons identity and hence their sense of belonging in their world.  The cause of his alienation appears to

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    Explore how Priestly presents and develops the relationship between Shelia and Mrs. Birling in ‘An Inspector Calls’. Priestly uses dialogue and stage directions to show a void between different generations. Although Mrs. Birling is Shelia’s mother she still refers to her as a ‘girl[s]’. The audience can sense Mrs. Birling’s condescending tone and how she still retains the view that Shelia is an immature and ignorant ‘girl[s]’ even though she is a fully grown adult who will soon be wed. This is ironic

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