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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
The Function Of Phrasal Verbs And Their Lexical Counterparts In Technical Manuals, Brock Brady
The Function Of Phrasal Verbs And Their Lexical Counterparts In Technical Manuals, Brock Brady
Dissertations and Theses
Much recent attention has been devoted to the semantic, syntactic, and pragmatic properties of phrasal verbs--those two-part lexical items like "put on" and "tighten up", along with suggestions regarding effective methods of teaching them to non-native speakers. According to Cornell (1985), phrasal verbs, "have been 'discovered' as an important component in curricula for English as a Foreign Language" (p. 1). However, it is very possible that they have become objects of current research primarily because of their complexity: their polysemy, their idiomaticity, their syntactic restraints, a complexity that means covering phrasal verbs in an ESL/EFL course can be a time-consuming …
Phrasal Verbs In Academic Lectures, Robert D. Pierce
Phrasal Verbs In Academic Lectures, Robert D. Pierce
Dissertations and Theses
Phrasal verbs are a pervasive and distinctly Germanic part of the spoken English language that has been alive for centuries. They have preceded American history, and yet considered to be "the most active and creative pattern and word formation in the American language" (Meyer, 1975). Distinctly colloquial, idiomatic and varying in shades of literalness and figurativity, phrasal verbs are largely dominant in casual usage, such as conversation, while the Latinate verbs of English are dominant in formal usage, such as in making reports (McArthur 1989). While foreign educators and their students, such as from Chinese countries, are found to emphasize …