Comparison on Chinese CLIL with European CLIL Abstract: Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL)‚ regarded as an “umbrella” term to dual-focused education where content is learnt through an additional language‚ is widely implemented in Europe. This paper mainly focuses on the theoretical bases of CLIL implementation‚ its implementation in Chinese context and its shortages compared with Europe. The whole essay includes three parts: the introduction‚ the body and the conclusion
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Language analysis Short sentence making an impact. Emotional appeals - dual mortgage bearers‚ attempting to create sympathy. Attacks – Call to action - Emotive language – desecrate‚ heavily pregnant wife‚ very vivid‚ shocking explicit‚ Puerile referring to graffiti but also condoning the council as childish and silly. Hyperbole - heavily pregnant wife‚ ‘eyesore’ disfigures the landscape‚ lurid‚ obscenities that would make even a bikie reel back in disgust‚ thorn. Metaphor - obscenities that
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What is language? What is lexicon? Language can be fundamental defined by most of the general public today‚ but lexicon may not easily be explained. In ones general opinion‚ language is a form of communicating ideas‚ emotions‚ and opinions. It varies according to the culture and generation of the individuals using it. This paper provides a definition of language and lexicon‚ the features of language‚ the levels of language‚ and the role of language in cognitive psychology. (Willingham‚ 2007)What
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THE LANGUAGE OF HUMOUR – THE HUMOUR OF LANGUAGE IRONY AND HUMOUR IN INTERPERSONAL VERBAL ENCOUNTERS Zsuzsanna Ajtony Abstract: In this paper the problem of verbal humour and irony is approached from a sociolinguistic perspective‚ starting from the Semantic Script Theory of Humour (Raskin 1985)‚ which establishes that all humour involves a semantic-pragmatic process. Humour should be understood and appreciated shared sociocultural knowledge; a common code should exist between speaker and recipient
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Candace Lubben Professor Kristen Heine WRA 125 Section 006 October 5‚ 2012 Language & Gender Language is a very powerful element. When we talk about language we refer to it as a body of words and the systems we use to communicate with people who are of the same community or nation‚ the same geographical area‚ or the same cultural traditions. Many factors can affect language such as: age‚ ethnicity‚ social class‚ education‚ and gender. Gender will be the main topic that I analyze in this
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POLITICAL LANGUAGE Language is the life blood of politics. Political power struggles‚ and the legitimisation of political policies and authorities occurs primarily through discourse and verbal representations. Power can either be exercised through coercion or what US commentator Walter Lippman termed in the 1930s the manufacture of consent. Largely unable‚ and hopefully unwilling‚ to coerce; political authorities in so called democratic polities often need to manufacture consent in order to
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Language innovation It is well known that time changes everything in this universe; thus; it would be strange if language alone does not alter. As the famous linguist Ferdinand de Saussure noted ‘’time changes all things: there is no reason why language should escape thi suniversal law’’ in (Aitchison (ed)‚ 1981: 16). All living languages are in a constant state of change in the sense that‚ new words and expressions come into existence‚ old words are dropped and new pronunciation takes place
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any language means a contraction‚ reduction and impoverishment of the sum total of the reservoir of human thought and knowledge as expressible through language. To what extent do you agree with this? As globalization takes place‚ languages spoken by the majority became lingua franca of different regions. English for example as its most widely spread across the entire world‚ is spoken by 360 to 400 million as their first language and 470 million to more than 1 billion as their second language. It
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1. Differences between First Language and Second Language | First Language | Second Language | Definition | any language other than English that a child was exposed to during early development and continues to be exposed to in the home or community | any language learned after the first language or mother tongue | Basis for learning | universal grammar alone | knowledge of the first language also serves as a basis for learning the second language | Learning Process | children spend
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Gender and Language: do men and women speak and use language differently? Does it matter if they do or do not? Why? March 29th‚ 2012 Gender and Language: do men and women speak and use language differently? Does it matter if they do or do not? Why? “Language‚ in the form of popular‚ educational‚ artistic and scientific literature‚ informal conversation
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