MINISTRY OF EDUCATION AND SCIENCE OF KAZAKHSTAN EURASIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY AFTER GUMILYOV L.N. FOREIGN PHILOLOGY DEPARTMENT ESSAY “The role of slang in our lives” Ogureyeva Inna F.Ph.-32(a) 0502100 Foreign Philology ASTANA 2012 Introduction Language propels everyday life and keeps us in touch with one another. Through many historical reviews we have increasing our knowledge about the ways of using this language – telegrams‚ post‚ telephone‚
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Argot (pronounced /ˈɑrɡoʊ/; French‚ Spanish‚ Romanian and Catalan for "slang") is a secret language used by various groups—including‚ but not limited to‚ thieves and other criminals—to prevent outsiders from understanding their conversations. The term argot is also used to refer to the informal specialized vocabulary from a particular field of study‚ hobby‚ job‚ sport‚ etc. The author Victor Hugo was one of the first to research argot extensively.[1] He describes it in his novel‚ Les Misérables‚
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otherwise known as slang. Some say that slang is not true English; that it should not belong in our vocabulary‚ but I am here to tell you otherwise. Slang has been used for many years and is slowly shaping the English language‚ to make it more interesting and unique. So what really is slang; how has it spread and has it enriched our language? To begin with‚ slang is neither profanity nor bad grammar; it is an informal language and is not appropriate for formal occasions. Slang was used throughout
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ENGLISH SLANG/IDIOMS SLANG: Nonstandard vocabulary of a given culture or subculture. In other words‚ slang is typically a nonstandard word‚ not a phrase as is an idiom. Slang would include words like pooped‚ to down a drink‚ boob-tube‚ threads‚ bonkers‚ basket case‚ to name a few. Slang words may or may not have alternative literal meanings. They may be "made up" words. IDIOM: A phrase that is commonly understood in a given culture or subculture to have a meaning different
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Reducing barriers whether be in general conversation or other mediums (e.g. emails‚ memos‚ or phone calls) is the responsibility of both the sender and receiver of the message. Techniques to improve communication and overcome barriers on the sender’s end would include being aware of barriers such as noise or distractions‚ be empathetic to the receiver‚ pay careful attention to nonverbal cues‚ and confirm understanding of the message they are sending (Baack‚ 2012). Baack (2012) also pointed out
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Trying to listen to more than one conversation at a time‚ this includes having the television or radio on while attempting to listen to somebody talk; being on the phone to one person and talking to another person in the same room and also being distracted by some dominant noise in the immediate environment. You find the communicator attractive/unattractive and you pay more attention to how you feel about the communicator and their physical appearance than to what they are saying. Perhaps you simply
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Communication barriers Diana Bedoya Castillo Introduction In this booklet I will explain 6 of the barriers to effective communication that can occur in the Nursing home. Health issues When a patient is feeling ill most of the home worker may not be able to communicate as effectively as when the patient is feeling well. This can affect the service users. Emotional barrier As a human beings we all emotional difficulties sometimes and become upset. The patient may have a bad
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Barriers to Communication • Physical (time‚ environment‚ comfort‚ needs‚ physical medium) • Cultural (ethnic‚ religious‚ and social differences) • Perceptional (viewing what is said from your own mindset) • Motivational (mental inertia) • Experiential (lack of similar experience) • Emotional (personal feelings at the moment) • Linguistic (different languages or vocabulary) • Non-verbal (non-word messages) • Competition (noise‚ doing other things besides listening) • Words (we
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transmission of thoughts‚ ideas and feelings from one mind to another. Effective communication is an essential component of organizational success whether it is at the interpersonal or intergroup or organizational or even external level. 1 12511 BARRIERS TO EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION Communication is a process beginning with a sender who encodes the message and passes it through some channel to the receiver who decodes the message. Communication is fruitful if and only if the message sent by the
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Communication barriers TITLE: Unit 03 Barriers to communication Communication barriers 1 Overview 3 Communication barriers 4 Types of communication barriers 5 Sender barriers and receiver barriers 7 Attitudes and values 8 Valuing differences 10 Environmental barriers 13 Managing environmental factors 13 Summary 14 Overview Communication barriers can interfere with or block the message you are trying to send. This topic will help you to: recognise the barriers to communication
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