The English Department
210
happens, it is unlikely that a department
will ever attain the
level of interest that has been described in this chapter. But it
is only fair to say that every teacher of English has a right to
expect the sort of support which has been outlined here, and
to fail to provide it is to make everyone’s task far more
difficult than necessary. A good department can produce
outstanding results
from a mediocre teacher, but a bad
department, insensitively run, can drive good teachers out of
the profession.
214
Glossary of Selected
Terms
In addition to mainstream topics in ELT, we
have indicated wide
suggestions for reading. The following is a glossary of terms which
may be encountered in further reading or in discussion.
accent (1) A variety of English pronunciation, usually based on geography,
e.g. Australia, Liverpool,
Scotland, Yorkshire and/or social class. See
RP. Cf.
dialect. (2) The pattern of prominence of stress, pitch, quality
and length in words and connected speech.
acceptability Usually contrasted with grammatically, e.g. ‘The man
thrown the ball kicked it’ is grammatical and acceptable whereas the
sentence ‘The man kicked the ball kicked it’ is grammatical (has the
same form) but is not acceptable.
accuracy see
fluency.
acquisition A term used for language learning which is unconscious, i.e.
without deliberate attention to rules. Some
writers contrast acquisition
with learning, i.e. conscious, deliberate learning. See
monitor.
active vocabulary Words, phrases, etc., which a learner can use in speech
and writing. Cf.
passive vocabulary.
AILA Association International de Linguistique Appliquée.
allophone see
phoneme.
analytic syllabus A syllabus which provides the student with authentic
texts from which he makes his own analysis. Structural considerations
are secondary to the use to which he puts the language. See
synthetic
syllabus.
anomalous finite A verb which forms the interrogative and negative
without the auxiliary
do, e.g. can, might, have, be. Cf.
modal verb.
anomie A feeling of disorientation often experienced by immigrants
through being unable to identify either
with the users of the home
language or with the host community.
Glossary
215
applied linguistics Studies of the relationship between theoretical
disciplines of language and related disciplines, on the one hand, and
their practical problems, on the other.
The main application is
considered to be language teaching, but the term is also applied to
machine translation, lexicology, etc.
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