Tuesday, 28. November 2006

Session on October, 19

Quiz 1

Why is a portfolio important?
What should a portfolio contain, and how are these
components defined?
Why should the portfolio be on a website?
How do you make a website?

This quiz has already been answered in this entry.

Quiz 2

What is a website?
What is a hypertext? Give examples! Google again
What is a text, what are its main properties?
How do these properties relate

  • to the mind?
  • to the world?

The answers are to be found as well.

Homework

Task: Prepare reports for discussion on ...

  • What are the following, and how old are they ?
  • Indo-European
  • Proto-Germanic
  • Old English
  • Middle English
  • Early Modern English
  • Provide examples of similar words in each of these
  • What are the main differences between English and
    German?


    Indo-European:

    • language family containing major European languages, languages of the Indian subcontinent, South-West asia, Central Asia; the Indo-Iranian languages form the largest sub-branch
    • largest number of speakers (ca. 3 billion native speakers)
    • Anatolian languages: earliest attended branch (ca. 4000-5000 BC); now extinct
    • divided into the Satem Group (easterm languages) and the Centum group (western languages such as Germanic and Celtic)

    Proto-Germanic:

    • ancestor of the German language family
    • spoken in North-West Europe in the later part of the 1st millennium

    Old English:

    • "Anglo-Saxon"
    • spoken in parts of England and Southern Scotland in 500/600 - 1100 AD
    • influenced by Germanic languages, Latin, Scandinavian (due to the Vikings' invasion) and Celtic

    Middle English:

    • spoken from 1100-1500 AD
    • language influenced by Norman French (because of the Norman Kingdom that establishes after the Battle of Hastings in 1066) until 1200
    • after 1200: English is spoken again but is different from Old English
    • ca. 10 000 French words are taken over into the vocabulary

    Early Modern English:

    • spoken in 1500-1800
    • example: Shakespeare
    • enlargement of vocabulary due to the introduction of printing and easier access to books

    Examples:

    The table with the examples is to be found here: Examples_table (html, 1 KB)

    What are the main differences between English and German?

    • cases (German: Akkusativ, Dativ,...; English: direct/indirect object)
    • pronouns (German: "du", "Sie"; English: "you")
    • conjugation of verbs (German: "ich mache", "du machst"; English: "I do", "you do")
    • determiners (German: "der/die/das"; English: "the")
    • adjectives (German: congruent with the noun: "blaue Hose", "blaues Auto"; English: non-congruent with nouns: "blue trousers", "blue car")
    • spelling (German: nouns always are written with a capital initial letter)


    Bibliography
    Glossary
    How To Make A Dictionary
    Introduction
    Introduction to Linguistics
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