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English in the Information Society

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Title: English in the Information Society


1
English in the Information Society
  • Grammar
  • Saskia Nolte

2
Der Binnenmarkt ist das Herz der Europäischen
Union. Aber viele Europäer können mit dem Begriff
wenig anfangen.
  • The domestic market is the heart of the European
    Union. But a great many Europeans cannot do much
    with this concept / arent familiar with this
    concept.
  • lex
  • inland, home, internal, inner (? domestic)
    market
  • center (? heart)
  • trade (? market)
  • expression, word (? concept)
  • how to handle this expression dont know,
    do not know what it is about do not get an
    idea of (? cannot do much with, arent familiar
    with)

3
Die Studenten-Organisation setzt sich für die
Rechte der Arbeiter in Textilfabriken der Ditten
Welt ein.
  • This student organization is fighting for the
    rights of workers in textile factories in the
    Third World.
  • sp
  • third world (? Third World)
  • prep
  • of (? in) the Third World
  • coh
  • the (? this) organization
  • lex
  • stand up for (? work for, fight for)
  • aspect
  • works/ fights for (? is working/fighting for)

4
Es war der ehrgeizige Versuch eines visionären
Franzosen, Europa aus der Phase der politischen
und wirtschaftlichen Lähmung zu befreien.
  • It was the ambitious attempt of a visionary
    Frenchman to free Europe from a phase of
    political and economic paralysis /
    immobilization.
  • lex
  • try (? attempt)
  • futuristic (? visionary)
  • financial, economical (? economic)
  • palsy, paralyzing, stagnation, handicap,
    standstill (? paralysis)
  • rescue, relieve, release (? liberate, free)
  • state, stage (? phase, era, period)
  • prep
  • free of (? from) a phase
  • det
  • a (? zero) paralysis
  • an (? the) ambitious attempt
  • tense
  • had been (? was attempt)

5
Grammatically wrong or merely a matter of style?
How important are these changes for
comprehension?
  • The heuristic advantage of the differentiation is
    particularly salient in cases in which publics
    become involved as third parties bringing about
    the peculiar dynamics of modern competition as a
    fight of all for all (Simmel).
  • The heuristic advantage of the differentiation is
    particularly salient in cases in which the public
    becomes involved as a third party, which brings
    about the special dynamics of modern competition
    as a fight of all for all (Simmel).

6
  • The sociology of knowledge should analyze the
    communicative conflicts about conjectured borders
    of knowledge because they allow studying the
    repression and marginalization of erring
    statements which are involved in any kind of
    knowledge production.
  • The sociology of knowledge would profit from an
    analysis of the communicative conflicts about the
    conjectural limits of knowledge because these
    conflicts allow the study of the repression and
    marginalization of erroneous statements, which
    are involved in the production of knowledge of
    all sorts.

7
How wide should/could International English be?
  • Basic English (Ogden)
  • The question of intelligibility is one which
    has generally been neglected by an undue
    insistence on correctness (Ogden, 1968).
  • Reduced grammatical system

8
  • Sentence structure
  • The General Word Order Subject- Verb- Object
  • Questions formed by inversion and do
  • Nouns
  • Plurals are formed with a trailing -s. The normal
    exceptions of standard English also apply,
    notably -es and -ies
  • Compound words may be combined from two nouns
    (milkman) or a noun and a directive (sundown).
  • Adjectives (Qualifiers)
  • Comparison is expressed with more and most -er
    and -est are alternative suffixes
  • Negative adjectives are formed with prefix un-
  • Adverbs use suffix -ly

9
  • Operation Words (Verbs)
  • 10 operators make, put, take, keep, let, give,
    get, go, come, do
  • 3 operator auxiliaries (have, be, seem)
  • directive (preposition)
  • equivalents of roughly 200 simple English
    verbs
  • Auxiliaries
  • may possibility/permission
  • will and have to form compound tenses
  • be passive voice
  • will only auxiliary for futurity
  • Pronouns
  • operators and pronouns have to be congruent in
    case, number and gender
  • Tense
  • a matter of common sense

10
How wide should/could International English be?
  • Basic Global English (Grzega)
  • a (fast) start for learners of English, open for
    developing larger skills of all kinds of
    Englishes
  • reduced but still natural, not artificial English
  • English for international contexts (with a
    guarantee of international intelligibility)
  • BGE should only offer the most basic and most
    frequent grammatical patterns of English
    (Grzega, 2005).
  • ? only 20 grammar rules

11
  • Prerequisite Differentiation of seven word
    classes (Nouns, Pronouns, Verbs, Adjectives,
    Adverbs, Conjunctions and Prepositions)
  • Sentence Structure Agent- Verb- Patient/object
    of the Action
  • Singular vs. Plural
  • Definite and indefinite article
  • Personal pronouns
  • Other pronouns
  • Simple present (Irregularities be, have, do)
  • Progressive
  • Simple past and present perfect
  • Progressive used for background and frame actions
  • Future

12
  1. Passive
  2. Auxiliaries (most important be, have, do)
  3. Relative clauses and relative pronouns
  4. Adverbs
  5. Comparison
  6. Negation
  7. Interrogative and imperative sentences
  8. Prepositional constructions with verbs
  9. Subordinate clause
  10. Conjunctions

13
  • Obviously, violations against grammatical rules
    of standard English do not seem to lead to any
    serious communicative breakdowns.
  • Native and advanced non-native speakers of
    English are asked to accept the variants
    presented as rightful variants in international
    contexts (Grzega, 2005)

14
How much Variation can there be in English in the
Information Society?
15
Works Cited
  • Ogden, C.K. Basic English International Second
    Language. New York Harcourt, Brace World,
    1968.
  • Grzega, J. Towards Global English Via Basic
    Global English (BGE) The Journal for
    EuroLinguistiX, Vol. 2, 2005. p. 65-164.
  • lthttp//www1.kueichstaett.de/SLF/EngluVglSW/ELiX/
    grzega-054.pdfgt
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