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Lexical Cohesion 13th Meeting. 13th Meeting Lexical Cohesion Continuity may be established in a text by the choice of words. This may take the form of.

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Presentation on theme: "Lexical Cohesion 13th Meeting. 13th Meeting Lexical Cohesion Continuity may be established in a text by the choice of words. This may take the form of."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lexical Cohesion 13th Meeting

2 13th Meeting Lexical Cohesion Continuity may be established in a text by the choice of words. This may take the form of word repetition, or the choice of a word that is related in some way to a previous one – either semantically such that the two are in the broadest sense synonymous, or collocationally, such that the two have a more than ordinary tendency to co-occur. Lexical cohesion may be maintained over long passages by the presence of keywords words having special significance for the meaning of the particular text. Continuity may be established in a text by the choice of words. This may take the form of word repetition, or the choice of a word that is related in some way to a previous one – either semantically such that the two are in the broadest sense synonymous, or collocationally, such that the two have a more than ordinary tendency to co-occur. Lexical cohesion may be maintained over long passages by the presence of keywords words having special significance for the meaning of the particular text.

3 Practice. Practice. Identify the lexical cohesion. Then determine the sense. Identify the lexical cohesion. Then determine the sense. The Parking Problem at Evergreen College I think finding a parking space close to the campus at Evergreen College is a major problem. There are not enough parking lots for students to park their cars. Therefore, students have to come early to get a parking space, and even then, sometimes they are unlucky and can’t get a good parking space. Once I couldn’t find a space in the west-side parking lot, and I had to drive in the streets for a half hour before I found one. So, I was late for class. Some students are late to class almost every time the English class meets. Some even drop the class, not because they can’t handle it, but because the can’t find a place to park close to the campus. The teacher warns them time and time again not to be late, but they can’t help it… What is the solution to the parking problem? Maybe the college should spend some funds to construct a multilevel parking lot that will accommodate three times as many cars as the present parking lot holds… I think finding a parking space close to the campus at Evergreen College is a major problem. There are not enough parking lots for students to park their cars. Therefore, students have to come early to get a parking space, and even then, sometimes they are unlucky and can’t get a good parking space. Once I couldn’t find a space in the west-side parking lot, and I had to drive in the streets for a half hour before I found one. So, I was late for class. Some students are late to class almost every time the English class meets. Some even drop the class, not because they can’t handle it, but because the can’t find a place to park close to the campus. The teacher warns them time and time again not to be late, but they can’t help it… What is the solution to the parking problem? Maybe the college should spend some funds to construct a multilevel parking lot that will accommodate three times as many cars as the present parking lot holds… (Taken form Hogue, 1999: 7) (Taken form Hogue, 1999: 7)

4 References Borjars.2001.English Grammar. UK: Prentice Hall International Ltd. Quirk, Randolph. A Comprehensive Grammar of The English Language. London: Longman Group Ltd. Halliday. 1976. Cohesion. Halliday.1985. Functional Grammar Larson. 1985. Meaning-Based Translation A Guide to Cross-Language Equivalence. USA: University Press of America Inc.


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