ОСОБЕННОСТИ РАБОТЫ С АНТОНИМАММИ В ШКОЛЕ
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Теги реферата: конспект урока 9 класс, банк рефератов
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Learners-in fact, all of us-have only a limited attention span; they
cannot listen to you for along time with maximum concentration. Make your
explanation as brief as you can, compatible with clarity. In some
situations it may also mean using the learners’ mother tongue, as a more
accessible and cost-effective alternative to the sometimes lengthy and
difficult target- language explanation.
5. Illustrate with examples
You may explain, for instance, the meaning of a word, illustrating
your explanation with examples of its use in various contexts, relating
these as far as possible to the learners’ own lives and experiences.
6. Get feedback
When you have finished explaining, check what they have understood. It is not just enough to ask “Do you understand?” ; learners will sometimes say they did even if they did not, out of politeness or unwillingness to lose face, or because they think they know what they have to do, but in fact completely misunderstood! It is better to ask them to do something that will show their understanding: to paraphrase in their own words, provide further illustration of their own.
WHAT IS ANTONYMY
Traditionally antonyms are defined as words that have opposite meaning. This definition is open to criticism. The latest linguistic investigations emphasize that antonyms are similar as words belonging to the same part of speech and the same semantic field, having the same grammatical meaning and functions, as well as similar collocations. Like synonyms antonyms are interchangeable at least at some contexts (hot in its figurative meaning “angry, excited” is chiefly combined with the names of unpleasant emotions: hot resentment, hot scorn; its antonym cold occurs with the same words). Unlike synonyms antonyms do not differ in style, or emotional colouring (they express, as a rule, emotional characteristics of the same intensity).
So antonyms are two or more words belonging to the same pat of speech, contradictory or contrary in meaning, and interchangeable at least at some contexts.
Almost every word can have one or more synonyms; comparatively few
have antonyms because not all notions can be opposed to one another.
Antonyms are primarily found in adjectives, nouns expressing quality and
state.
It should be noted, that as words are polysemantic ones and the same words may have different antonyms (light bag-heavy bag; light wind-strong wind; light colors-dark colors).
Generally we may divide antonyms into 2 groups: absolute and derivational.
Absolute antonyms are subdivided into antonyms proper where opposition is gradual (cold (cool)-(warm) hot; large-little or small), complementaries having a binary opposition (dead-alive, single-married), conversives denoting one and the same referent from different points of view (to sell- to buy, to give to receive).
Derivational antonyms may be affixal (happy-unhappy, logical- illogical) or suffixal (hopeful-hopeless).
It is not always possible to replace a word by its opposite. Where it is possible you may notice that some words have several opposites depending on the context.
The opposite of “old”, for example, can be “new” or “young” depending on the situation.
WORDS THAT ARE THEIR OWN OPPOSITES
There are some antonyms that are called auto-antonyms - words that have two opposite meanings. For example, to "clip" may mean to cut a little piece off, or to put a little piece on. To "look over" may mean careful scrutiny or that you missed an important detail. Sometimes the antonymy may be historical: "nice" used to denote an unpleasant quality. There is a discussion of whether any generalities could be made about such pairs. Are they regularly motivated, or always a coincidence? Meanwhile, here are more auto-antonyms that got left out of last post: One auto-antonym is "moot", which at once means "suitable for debate" and "not worth discussing".
Impregnable: able to impregnated or inable to be pregnated, cope(s)mate: used to mean antagonist and now means partner or comrade, It
turns out that they were having a week celebrating "fence-setters", evidently another term for what is calling auto-antonyms. BRUCE NEVIN
reminds us of an intercontinental auto-antonym pair: "public school" in
Britain is "private school" in the USA and vice versa.
Infer: historically (and now, informally) this means "imply" as well.
Rent, lease: several pointed out to me that these means both lend and
borrow. In addition, Chinese operates similarly with respect to this pair, and WOLFGANG LIPP notes a similar auto-antonymy to represent "give" and
"take" in pronunciation but not in writing.
Learn/teach: in "sub" - Standard English, these two meanings fuse into
“learn”, as they do in standard Russian “uchit'” Here is “sensitive”: this
may describe either someone with profound understanding for the feelings of
others, and tolerates differences of opinion (thus "sensitivity training"
for group leaders) as well as a paranoid who doesn't listen to what people
are really saying, and decides to take everything as a personal insult.
Hole/whole: Spelled the first way, an entire absence of matter; the
second, entire presence. This reminds me of "pit" which can be either a
hollow or the stone of a fruit. Which reminds me of "seeded" oranges
(insert your favourite fruit here) - oranges with seeds (as opposed to
navel oranges, which have no seeds), OR oranges that have had their seeds
removed. If you think you're beginning to see some patterns here, you're
not alone! There were received a few theories on the ultimate essence of
auto-antonymy, historical, psychological, and sociological approaches.
These theories show that auto-antonymy comes about for a variety of
reasons.
“I've been enjoying the discussion of words that are their own
antonyms.
At first I thought the classic example of Latin Altus "high" or "deep"
might fit in, but as I thought about it I figured it was just unmarked
for point of view (say when cleaning out an empty swimming pool then
"Deep" becomes "high") so I just looked to see if it was on the list and got a comment. No. Good. But one that I have long wondered about is
"risk" as in "he risked winning the game". I was shocked (as a teenager) the first time I saw "he risked losing the game" (or something like that) in print, because I previously thought (and am still inclined toward) the complement of risk being the desirable result, not the undesirable one. Whether or not this fits into this discussion, I wonder if anyone else has had a similar (or opposite) reaction or any thoughts
about what's going on in the case of "risk"[2]”.
HOW TO TEACH ANTONYMS
Teaching antonyms requires great skill and practice. For this purpose the teacher uses various techniques and methods.
For example, while teaching antonyms “small” and “big” he uses
pictures for presenting them. He says: In these pictures you see two balls.
(The balls should differ only in size.) This is a small ball, and this is a
big ball. This ball is small, and that ball is big. Now, Sasha, come up to
the picture and point to the small ball (big ball).
Then the teacher shows another picture with two houses in it – a white house and a yellow house, and he asks another pupil to point to the white house, to the u yellow house, and so on.
The teacher may use gestures, for example, for conveying the meaning of stand up, sit down. He says: Lena, stand up. He shows with his hands what she must do. Lena stands up. Now, sit down. Again with the movement of his hands he shows the girl what she must do. The other pupils listen to the teacher and watch what Lena is doing. Then many pupils are invited to perform the actions.
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