Michael McCarthy
English Vocabulary: The Basics
Michael McCarthy
English Vocabulary: The Basics
- Broschiertes Buch
English Vocabulary: The Basics offers a clear, non-jargonistic introduction to English vocabulary, the way linguists classify and explain it, and the place of vocabulary in our overall picture of the language, and in society.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- The Routledge Handbook of Corpora and English Language Teaching and Learning196,99 €
- Multifunctionality in English123,99 €
- Vaclav BrezinaA Frequency Dictionary of British English194,99 €
- Anne O'KeeffeIntroducing Pragmatics in Use39,99 €
- Australian English Reimagined60,99 €
- Paul Carley (UK University of Leicester)American English Phonetic Transcription55,99 €
- Sara M. BeaudrieHeritage Language Program Direction174,99 €
-
-
-
English Vocabulary: The Basics offers a clear, non-jargonistic introduction to English vocabulary, the way linguists classify and explain it, and the place of vocabulary in our overall picture of the language, and in society.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- The Basics
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 186
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Dezember 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 195mm x 124mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 214g
- ISBN-13: 9781032256979
- ISBN-10: 1032256974
- Artikelnr.: 65609894
- The Basics
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 186
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Dezember 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 195mm x 124mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 214g
- ISBN-13: 9781032256979
- ISBN-10: 1032256974
- Artikelnr.: 65609894
Michael McCarthy is Emeritus Professor of Applied Linguistics, University of Nottingham, and Adjunct Professor of Applied Linguistics, University of Limerick. He has (co-)authored and edited 58 books and was co-founder (with Ronald Carter) of the CANCODE spoken English corpus. He has lectured in 46 countries and has been involved in language teaching and applied linguistics for 57 years.
CONTENTS INTRODUCTION TO THE READER 1 A WORD OR TWO ABOUT WORDS WHAT DO WE MEAN BY `VOCABULARY
? THE `ENGLISH
IN ENGLISH VOCABULARY AT LEAST WE KNOW WHAT WORDS ARE
DON
T WE? SPACED OUT EYES AND EARS IT JUST FEELS RIGHT I SEE WHAT YOU MEAN MORPHEMES TAKING WORDS TO PIECES GRAMMAR AND LEXIS WORDS STICK TOGETHER COMPOUNDS MULTI-WORD UNITS IDIOMS COLLOCATION RECIPES FOR NEW WORDS WORDS COME AND GO NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN HALF AND HALF KEEP IT SHORT LENDING AND BORROWING CORPORA: LETTING THE DATA SPEAK USING A CORPUS CORPUS EXAMPLE (1): HARD-WORKING WORDS CORPUS EXAMPLE (2): SPEAKING VERSUS WRITING SUMMING UP FURTHER READING 2 WHERE DO ENGLISH WORDS COME FROM? THE DIM AND DISTANT PAST THE BEGINNING OF ENGLISH ANGLO-SAXONS BEGINNING TO LOOK FAMILIAR: CHRONICLES AND MONSTERS MORE INCOMERS VIKINGS A BIG CHANGE: THE NORMANS ARRIVE PUTTING IT IN BLACK AND WHITE TELLING TALES PIERS PLOWMAN INTO THE MODERN ERA LANGUAGE ABOUT LANGUAGE AN EXPANDING VOCABULARY CIRCLING THE WORLD A SETTLED LANGUAGE SPELLING IT OUT NEW WORLDS, NEW CULTURES NEW TECHNOLOGIES, NEW ENGLISHES FURTHER READING 3 WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN? FROM FORM TO MEANING WORDING THE WORLD MAKING SENSE OF THE LEXICON SAME OR DIFFERENT? SYNONYMY LOOKS THE SAME, SOUNDS THE SAME BUT
SOMETHING DIFFERENT CLASSIFYING THE WORLD THE UPSIDE-DOWN TREE SCIENTIFICALLY SPEAKING FUZZY BORDERS AND STEREOTYPES AN ARM AND A LEG: PARTS AND WHOLES MAKING SENSE IN THE REAL WORLD TAKING MEANING TO PIECES PLUSES AND MINUSES TO EVERYTHING WORDS, THE MIND AND THE WORLD PRAGMATICS: WHAT DO YOU MEAN? FURTHER READING 4 BEATING ABOUT THE BUSH: FIGURATIVE MEANING JUST IMAGINE ATOMS OR MOLECULES? BITE-SIZED CHUNKS ROOM FOR MANOUEVRE AS CLEAR AS MUD: IDIOMS DO YOU SEE WHAT I MEAN? IN A NUTSHELL IDIOM-PRONE LOOK AT IT THIS WAY METAPHORS PROVERBS AND METAPHORS TROPES GALORE HERE COMES THE ARMY: METONYMY NO EXAGGERATION: HYPERBOLE A NOT UNINTERESTING TROPE: UNDERSTATEMENT EUPHEMISMS SUMMARY FURTHER READING 5 BEAR THIS IN MIND: THE MENTAL LEXICON A REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENT HOW DID IT ALL GET THERE? ACQUIRING VOCABULARY DESIGNING A HUMAN ONE WORD AT A TIME TELEGRAMS FROM A CHILD MORE THAN ONE WAY OF SAYING THINGS SPELL IT OUT WHERE ARE ALL THOSE WORDS? MIND AND BRAIN: THE MENTAL LEXICON HOW DOES IT WORK? FASTER THAN YOU CAN SAY JACK ROBINSON WHAT COMES INTO YOUR HEAD? JUST A SLIP OF THE TONGUE? IN TWO MINDS AGAIN CONCLUSION FURTHER READING 6 VOCABULARY IN ACTION WORDS OUT THERE LANGUAGE SNAPSHOTS HARD WORDS NOT IN FRONT OF THE CHILDREN LETTING THE MACHINE DECIDE: CORPORA QUIZZING THE DATA EXCHANGING A FEW WORDS LET
S NOT GO INTO DETAIL SO, CONSEQUENTLY
WINDOWS ON CULTURE WORDS ON THE MOVE NAUGHTY BUT NICE A NOTICEABLE UPTICK SHOWING YOUR AGE MAPPING ENGLISH VOCABULARY VARIETIES DIFFERENT VOICES: DIALECTS AND SOCIOLECTS SPECIAL VOCABULARIES WORDS AND THE IMAGINATION FLOUTING CONVENTIONS OLD WORDS, NEW MEANINGS FOOD FOR THOUGHT HAVING A LAUGH EDUCATION AND LEARNING GROWING UP WITH WORDS SECOND LANGUAGE VOCABULARY THE END OF THE BEGINNING FURTHER READING GLOSSARY OF KEY TERMS REFERENCES INDEX
? THE `ENGLISH
IN ENGLISH VOCABULARY AT LEAST WE KNOW WHAT WORDS ARE
DON
T WE? SPACED OUT EYES AND EARS IT JUST FEELS RIGHT I SEE WHAT YOU MEAN MORPHEMES TAKING WORDS TO PIECES GRAMMAR AND LEXIS WORDS STICK TOGETHER COMPOUNDS MULTI-WORD UNITS IDIOMS COLLOCATION RECIPES FOR NEW WORDS WORDS COME AND GO NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN HALF AND HALF KEEP IT SHORT LENDING AND BORROWING CORPORA: LETTING THE DATA SPEAK USING A CORPUS CORPUS EXAMPLE (1): HARD-WORKING WORDS CORPUS EXAMPLE (2): SPEAKING VERSUS WRITING SUMMING UP FURTHER READING 2 WHERE DO ENGLISH WORDS COME FROM? THE DIM AND DISTANT PAST THE BEGINNING OF ENGLISH ANGLO-SAXONS BEGINNING TO LOOK FAMILIAR: CHRONICLES AND MONSTERS MORE INCOMERS VIKINGS A BIG CHANGE: THE NORMANS ARRIVE PUTTING IT IN BLACK AND WHITE TELLING TALES PIERS PLOWMAN INTO THE MODERN ERA LANGUAGE ABOUT LANGUAGE AN EXPANDING VOCABULARY CIRCLING THE WORLD A SETTLED LANGUAGE SPELLING IT OUT NEW WORLDS, NEW CULTURES NEW TECHNOLOGIES, NEW ENGLISHES FURTHER READING 3 WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN? FROM FORM TO MEANING WORDING THE WORLD MAKING SENSE OF THE LEXICON SAME OR DIFFERENT? SYNONYMY LOOKS THE SAME, SOUNDS THE SAME BUT
SOMETHING DIFFERENT CLASSIFYING THE WORLD THE UPSIDE-DOWN TREE SCIENTIFICALLY SPEAKING FUZZY BORDERS AND STEREOTYPES AN ARM AND A LEG: PARTS AND WHOLES MAKING SENSE IN THE REAL WORLD TAKING MEANING TO PIECES PLUSES AND MINUSES TO EVERYTHING WORDS, THE MIND AND THE WORLD PRAGMATICS: WHAT DO YOU MEAN? FURTHER READING 4 BEATING ABOUT THE BUSH: FIGURATIVE MEANING JUST IMAGINE ATOMS OR MOLECULES? BITE-SIZED CHUNKS ROOM FOR MANOUEVRE AS CLEAR AS MUD: IDIOMS DO YOU SEE WHAT I MEAN? IN A NUTSHELL IDIOM-PRONE LOOK AT IT THIS WAY METAPHORS PROVERBS AND METAPHORS TROPES GALORE HERE COMES THE ARMY: METONYMY NO EXAGGERATION: HYPERBOLE A NOT UNINTERESTING TROPE: UNDERSTATEMENT EUPHEMISMS SUMMARY FURTHER READING 5 BEAR THIS IN MIND: THE MENTAL LEXICON A REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENT HOW DID IT ALL GET THERE? ACQUIRING VOCABULARY DESIGNING A HUMAN ONE WORD AT A TIME TELEGRAMS FROM A CHILD MORE THAN ONE WAY OF SAYING THINGS SPELL IT OUT WHERE ARE ALL THOSE WORDS? MIND AND BRAIN: THE MENTAL LEXICON HOW DOES IT WORK? FASTER THAN YOU CAN SAY JACK ROBINSON WHAT COMES INTO YOUR HEAD? JUST A SLIP OF THE TONGUE? IN TWO MINDS AGAIN CONCLUSION FURTHER READING 6 VOCABULARY IN ACTION WORDS OUT THERE LANGUAGE SNAPSHOTS HARD WORDS NOT IN FRONT OF THE CHILDREN LETTING THE MACHINE DECIDE: CORPORA QUIZZING THE DATA EXCHANGING A FEW WORDS LET
S NOT GO INTO DETAIL SO, CONSEQUENTLY
WINDOWS ON CULTURE WORDS ON THE MOVE NAUGHTY BUT NICE A NOTICEABLE UPTICK SHOWING YOUR AGE MAPPING ENGLISH VOCABULARY VARIETIES DIFFERENT VOICES: DIALECTS AND SOCIOLECTS SPECIAL VOCABULARIES WORDS AND THE IMAGINATION FLOUTING CONVENTIONS OLD WORDS, NEW MEANINGS FOOD FOR THOUGHT HAVING A LAUGH EDUCATION AND LEARNING GROWING UP WITH WORDS SECOND LANGUAGE VOCABULARY THE END OF THE BEGINNING FURTHER READING GLOSSARY OF KEY TERMS REFERENCES INDEX
CONTENTS INTRODUCTION TO THE READER 1 A WORD OR TWO ABOUT WORDS WHAT DO WE MEAN BY `VOCABULARY
? THE `ENGLISH
IN ENGLISH VOCABULARY AT LEAST WE KNOW WHAT WORDS ARE
DON
T WE? SPACED OUT EYES AND EARS IT JUST FEELS RIGHT I SEE WHAT YOU MEAN MORPHEMES TAKING WORDS TO PIECES GRAMMAR AND LEXIS WORDS STICK TOGETHER COMPOUNDS MULTI-WORD UNITS IDIOMS COLLOCATION RECIPES FOR NEW WORDS WORDS COME AND GO NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN HALF AND HALF KEEP IT SHORT LENDING AND BORROWING CORPORA: LETTING THE DATA SPEAK USING A CORPUS CORPUS EXAMPLE (1): HARD-WORKING WORDS CORPUS EXAMPLE (2): SPEAKING VERSUS WRITING SUMMING UP FURTHER READING 2 WHERE DO ENGLISH WORDS COME FROM? THE DIM AND DISTANT PAST THE BEGINNING OF ENGLISH ANGLO-SAXONS BEGINNING TO LOOK FAMILIAR: CHRONICLES AND MONSTERS MORE INCOMERS VIKINGS A BIG CHANGE: THE NORMANS ARRIVE PUTTING IT IN BLACK AND WHITE TELLING TALES PIERS PLOWMAN INTO THE MODERN ERA LANGUAGE ABOUT LANGUAGE AN EXPANDING VOCABULARY CIRCLING THE WORLD A SETTLED LANGUAGE SPELLING IT OUT NEW WORLDS, NEW CULTURES NEW TECHNOLOGIES, NEW ENGLISHES FURTHER READING 3 WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN? FROM FORM TO MEANING WORDING THE WORLD MAKING SENSE OF THE LEXICON SAME OR DIFFERENT? SYNONYMY LOOKS THE SAME, SOUNDS THE SAME BUT
SOMETHING DIFFERENT CLASSIFYING THE WORLD THE UPSIDE-DOWN TREE SCIENTIFICALLY SPEAKING FUZZY BORDERS AND STEREOTYPES AN ARM AND A LEG: PARTS AND WHOLES MAKING SENSE IN THE REAL WORLD TAKING MEANING TO PIECES PLUSES AND MINUSES TO EVERYTHING WORDS, THE MIND AND THE WORLD PRAGMATICS: WHAT DO YOU MEAN? FURTHER READING 4 BEATING ABOUT THE BUSH: FIGURATIVE MEANING JUST IMAGINE ATOMS OR MOLECULES? BITE-SIZED CHUNKS ROOM FOR MANOUEVRE AS CLEAR AS MUD: IDIOMS DO YOU SEE WHAT I MEAN? IN A NUTSHELL IDIOM-PRONE LOOK AT IT THIS WAY METAPHORS PROVERBS AND METAPHORS TROPES GALORE HERE COMES THE ARMY: METONYMY NO EXAGGERATION: HYPERBOLE A NOT UNINTERESTING TROPE: UNDERSTATEMENT EUPHEMISMS SUMMARY FURTHER READING 5 BEAR THIS IN MIND: THE MENTAL LEXICON A REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENT HOW DID IT ALL GET THERE? ACQUIRING VOCABULARY DESIGNING A HUMAN ONE WORD AT A TIME TELEGRAMS FROM A CHILD MORE THAN ONE WAY OF SAYING THINGS SPELL IT OUT WHERE ARE ALL THOSE WORDS? MIND AND BRAIN: THE MENTAL LEXICON HOW DOES IT WORK? FASTER THAN YOU CAN SAY JACK ROBINSON WHAT COMES INTO YOUR HEAD? JUST A SLIP OF THE TONGUE? IN TWO MINDS AGAIN CONCLUSION FURTHER READING 6 VOCABULARY IN ACTION WORDS OUT THERE LANGUAGE SNAPSHOTS HARD WORDS NOT IN FRONT OF THE CHILDREN LETTING THE MACHINE DECIDE: CORPORA QUIZZING THE DATA EXCHANGING A FEW WORDS LET
S NOT GO INTO DETAIL SO, CONSEQUENTLY
WINDOWS ON CULTURE WORDS ON THE MOVE NAUGHTY BUT NICE A NOTICEABLE UPTICK SHOWING YOUR AGE MAPPING ENGLISH VOCABULARY VARIETIES DIFFERENT VOICES: DIALECTS AND SOCIOLECTS SPECIAL VOCABULARIES WORDS AND THE IMAGINATION FLOUTING CONVENTIONS OLD WORDS, NEW MEANINGS FOOD FOR THOUGHT HAVING A LAUGH EDUCATION AND LEARNING GROWING UP WITH WORDS SECOND LANGUAGE VOCABULARY THE END OF THE BEGINNING FURTHER READING GLOSSARY OF KEY TERMS REFERENCES INDEX
? THE `ENGLISH
IN ENGLISH VOCABULARY AT LEAST WE KNOW WHAT WORDS ARE
DON
T WE? SPACED OUT EYES AND EARS IT JUST FEELS RIGHT I SEE WHAT YOU MEAN MORPHEMES TAKING WORDS TO PIECES GRAMMAR AND LEXIS WORDS STICK TOGETHER COMPOUNDS MULTI-WORD UNITS IDIOMS COLLOCATION RECIPES FOR NEW WORDS WORDS COME AND GO NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN HALF AND HALF KEEP IT SHORT LENDING AND BORROWING CORPORA: LETTING THE DATA SPEAK USING A CORPUS CORPUS EXAMPLE (1): HARD-WORKING WORDS CORPUS EXAMPLE (2): SPEAKING VERSUS WRITING SUMMING UP FURTHER READING 2 WHERE DO ENGLISH WORDS COME FROM? THE DIM AND DISTANT PAST THE BEGINNING OF ENGLISH ANGLO-SAXONS BEGINNING TO LOOK FAMILIAR: CHRONICLES AND MONSTERS MORE INCOMERS VIKINGS A BIG CHANGE: THE NORMANS ARRIVE PUTTING IT IN BLACK AND WHITE TELLING TALES PIERS PLOWMAN INTO THE MODERN ERA LANGUAGE ABOUT LANGUAGE AN EXPANDING VOCABULARY CIRCLING THE WORLD A SETTLED LANGUAGE SPELLING IT OUT NEW WORLDS, NEW CULTURES NEW TECHNOLOGIES, NEW ENGLISHES FURTHER READING 3 WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN? FROM FORM TO MEANING WORDING THE WORLD MAKING SENSE OF THE LEXICON SAME OR DIFFERENT? SYNONYMY LOOKS THE SAME, SOUNDS THE SAME BUT
SOMETHING DIFFERENT CLASSIFYING THE WORLD THE UPSIDE-DOWN TREE SCIENTIFICALLY SPEAKING FUZZY BORDERS AND STEREOTYPES AN ARM AND A LEG: PARTS AND WHOLES MAKING SENSE IN THE REAL WORLD TAKING MEANING TO PIECES PLUSES AND MINUSES TO EVERYTHING WORDS, THE MIND AND THE WORLD PRAGMATICS: WHAT DO YOU MEAN? FURTHER READING 4 BEATING ABOUT THE BUSH: FIGURATIVE MEANING JUST IMAGINE ATOMS OR MOLECULES? BITE-SIZED CHUNKS ROOM FOR MANOUEVRE AS CLEAR AS MUD: IDIOMS DO YOU SEE WHAT I MEAN? IN A NUTSHELL IDIOM-PRONE LOOK AT IT THIS WAY METAPHORS PROVERBS AND METAPHORS TROPES GALORE HERE COMES THE ARMY: METONYMY NO EXAGGERATION: HYPERBOLE A NOT UNINTERESTING TROPE: UNDERSTATEMENT EUPHEMISMS SUMMARY FURTHER READING 5 BEAR THIS IN MIND: THE MENTAL LEXICON A REMARKABLE ACHIEVEMENT HOW DID IT ALL GET THERE? ACQUIRING VOCABULARY DESIGNING A HUMAN ONE WORD AT A TIME TELEGRAMS FROM A CHILD MORE THAN ONE WAY OF SAYING THINGS SPELL IT OUT WHERE ARE ALL THOSE WORDS? MIND AND BRAIN: THE MENTAL LEXICON HOW DOES IT WORK? FASTER THAN YOU CAN SAY JACK ROBINSON WHAT COMES INTO YOUR HEAD? JUST A SLIP OF THE TONGUE? IN TWO MINDS AGAIN CONCLUSION FURTHER READING 6 VOCABULARY IN ACTION WORDS OUT THERE LANGUAGE SNAPSHOTS HARD WORDS NOT IN FRONT OF THE CHILDREN LETTING THE MACHINE DECIDE: CORPORA QUIZZING THE DATA EXCHANGING A FEW WORDS LET
S NOT GO INTO DETAIL SO, CONSEQUENTLY
WINDOWS ON CULTURE WORDS ON THE MOVE NAUGHTY BUT NICE A NOTICEABLE UPTICK SHOWING YOUR AGE MAPPING ENGLISH VOCABULARY VARIETIES DIFFERENT VOICES: DIALECTS AND SOCIOLECTS SPECIAL VOCABULARIES WORDS AND THE IMAGINATION FLOUTING CONVENTIONS OLD WORDS, NEW MEANINGS FOOD FOR THOUGHT HAVING A LAUGH EDUCATION AND LEARNING GROWING UP WITH WORDS SECOND LANGUAGE VOCABULARY THE END OF THE BEGINNING FURTHER READING GLOSSARY OF KEY TERMS REFERENCES INDEX