a1 mc1 visuals
DESCRIPTION
These are the visuals you saw on the Marratech screen at Marratech Conference 1 on Course a1 from Högskolan i Kalmar.TRANSCRIPT
Page 1 of 21
t´bQk´U Iz´ fIlTI wi˘d DQt fr´m D´ devl d√T pr´Usi˘d D√/dreInz jç˘ pŒ˘s D√t bŒ˘nz jç˘ kl´UDz D√t meIks ´tSImnI ´v jç˘ n´Uz
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Tobacco is a filthy weed, That from the devil doth proceed; That drains your purse, That burns your clothes, That makes a chimney of your nose. (Anonymous – around 1600)
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Plosives
p t k b d g
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Fricatives
f T s S v D z Z
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Affricates
tS dZ
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Nasals
m n N
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Semi-Vowels, Lateral & Approximant
j w l r
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Who is Anne?
Who is Boudicca?
Who is Canute?
Who is Disraeli?
Who is Edward?
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Anne: tell us about Achebe
Boudicca: tell us about the Igbo
Canute: what are the difficult sounds?
Disraeli: do you need Swedish grammatical
metalanguage?
Edward: how are you all getting on?
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“Okonkwo deserves
what he gets because he’s
a wife-beater.”
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Page 13 of 21
Centring Diphthongs & Triphthongs
\I´\ \U´\
\e´\
\aI´\ \aU´\
\ \´
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U
Closing Diphthongs
\eI\
\´U\
\çI\
\aU\\aI\
I\ \ \ \
Page 15 of 21
Events
Time
Page 16 of 21
Events
Ikemefuna comes to Okonkwo.
Okonkwo breaks the Week of Peace.
Okonkwo kills Ikemefuna.
Ezinma becomes very ill.
A priestess comes for Ezinma.
Okonkwo kills a boy and is exiled.
Time
Chapter 2 Chapter 4 Chapter 7 Chapter 9 Chapter 11 Chapter 13
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Aristotle's Theory of Tragedy
A Tragic Hero
hamartia - an
error of
judgement
hubris (pride - thinking
you can do better than the gods)
inevitability
anagnorisis(there are
things going on the hero
doesn't know about)
peripeteia(a sudden reversal of fortune)
The
Tragic
End
catharsis - moral
cleansing for the
audience
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Wars either make or break prime ministers, according to the pollsters - and this war is all but breaking Tony Blair. It has sent him into free fall over the last year, plunging down through the clouds of approval that kept him uniquely popular for most of his time in office. When he goes, whenever that may be, Iraq will be carved on his tremor-prone heart. What Suez did to Anthony Eden, what Vietnam did to Lyndon Johnson is a fate now threatening him. However hard he tries to return to the domestic agenda, Iraq dogs his every step, day after day. It is turning into a classical tragedy because it is one of his own making, wrought by his own fatal flaw.
Polly Toynbee Friday, February 6, 2004 The Guardian
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Time Line
for English
Verbs
NowThen
(in the past)Then
(in the future)
1 2
3 54
12
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I was seeing his wife when he went to New York. I saw his wife when he went to New York.