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Showing papers in "Slavic and East European Journal in 1979"



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The notion of lexical functions can be used by language teachers to help students learn proper lexical collocations and develop a richer vocabulary and is presented in three parts: first the lexico-syntactic problem facing the student is presented and how the principle of Lexical functions relates to it is shown; then examples of variousLexical functions are given; finally the illustrations are presented.
Abstract: The notion of lexical functions can be used by language teachers to help students learn proper lexical collocations and develop a richer vocabulary.' The notion is taken from the works of I. Mel',uk, A. Zolkovskij, Ju. Apresjan, and their colleagues.2 This article is in three parts: first we present the lexico-syntactic problem facing the student and try to show how the principle of lexical functions relates to it; then we give examples of various lexical functions; finally we present illustrative pedagogical materials. The language learner generally has at his disposal two standard printed sources of information about the target language, a grammar and a dictionary. If a student of Russian wants to say that something is 'under the table' in the target language, the dictionary gives him pod 'under' and stol 'table'; the dictionary and the grammar tell him that pod takes the instrumental case and the grammar provides the ending -om. If, however, the student wants to "place an order" for something, neither the grammar nor the dictionary will tell him what verb to use with zakaz 'order.' Neither under the entry 'order' nor under the entry 'place' in MiUller's widely used English-Russian dictionary can one find the collocation delat' zakaz. (The fact that he can look up the paraphrase 'to order,' find the verb zakazat', and make do with that, is beside the point here). To conduct this vain search, the dictionary user must examine twenty-four sub-entries under 'take,' not counting idioms. In other cases, the dictionary does provide this sort of information. If the student wants to know what to do to a vyvod 'conclusion,' i.e. how to say 'draw a conclusion,' the Muiller dictionary contains delat' vyvod under both 'conclusion' and 'draw.' But if the dictionary user elects to look up 'draw' first (a long entry), rather than 'conclusion' (a relatively short entry), he will have to examine eighteen of the twenty-eight sub-entries before hitting upon delat' vyvod. In still other cases the dictionary is misleading. If the user wants to know what to do to a razgovor 'conversation,' i.e. English 'have/carry on a conversation,' he will find the expression vesti pustoj razgovor under the entry razgovor for English 'make (idle) conversation.' The semantic element of superficiality is rendered in Russian by the adjective pustoj, and in English

35 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analyse des figures symboliques de la femme idealisee (la Madone, la gitane, la rusalka, Ophelie, la princesse) qu'on trouve au centre de l'oeuvre du peintre and du poete.
Abstract: Analyse des figures symboliques de la femme idealisee (la Madone, la gitane, la rusalka, Ophelie, la princesse) qu'on trouve au centre de l'oeuvre du peintre et du poete.

23 citations
















Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Tolstoy's philosophy of history as discussed by the authors has been studied extensively in the literature and has been translated into many languages, including English, German, French, Dutch, and Dutch.
Abstract: Contributors Editor's preface Introduction R. F. Christian Part I: 1. On translating Tolstoy Henry Gifford 2. War over War and Peace: Prince Andrey Bolkonsky and critical literature of the 1860s and early 1870s A. V. Knowles 3. A man speaking to men: the narratives of War and Peace W. Gareth Jones 4. Problems of communication in Anna Karenina Malcolm V. Jones 5. Hadji Murat: the power of understatement A. D. P. Briggs Part II: 6. The body and pressure of time E. Lampert 7. Tolstoy and religion E. B. Greenwood 8. Tolstoy's philosophy of history F. F. Seeley 9. The Purleigh Colony: Tolstoyan togetherness in the late 1890s M. J. de K. Holman Tolstoy studies in Great Britain: a bibliographical survey Garth M. Terry Index.