:Course Contents

:The course aims to cover the following

1. Introduction:

A. What is Literature?

B. Why Read Literature? Why Study It?

C. Literary and non-literary writing

D. Denotation and connotation

E. Major literary types(novel, drama, and poetry).

2. Figures of speech and figurative language.

3. A historical survey of English literature from Anglo-Saxon period to

Modern time. (Medieval, Elizabethan, Edwardian, Jacobean, Renaissance,

Romantic, Victorian and 20th Century).

4. The study of selected works of major writers who were representative of

their

ages like Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Pope, Wordsworth, Tennyson,

Hardy, Eliot etc.: to be chosen by the lecturer

.

:Course Book

1. Handouts.

2. Booth, A.; Hunter, P. & Mays, K. 2005. The Norton Introduction to

Literature. W. Norton & Company

:Course Content

The course will cover the following:

1. Morphology: The words of Language

Open and closed classes of words

Word sets

Morphemes: The minimal units of meaning

Bound and free morphemes

Morphological rules of word formation

Derivational morphemes

Word coinage – Compounds – Acronyms – Blends – Back-formations –

Extending word formation rules – Abbreviations – Words from names

Morphology and syntax: Inflectional morphology

The pronunciation of morphemes

Morphophonemic's

2. Grammar

Syntax, inflection and morphology

Grammaticality, productivity and arbitraries

Parts of speech, form – classes and grammatical categories

Additional grammatical concepts

Constituent structure

Generative grammar (transformational)

Phrase structure rules

Transformational rules

Ambiguity

3. Semantics

The diversity of meaning

Lexical meaning: homonymy, polysemy, synonymy

Lexical meaning: sense and denotation

34

Semantics and grammar

Sentence-meaning and utterance-meaning

Formal sentences

4. Language-change

Historical linguistics

Language families

The Comparative method

Analogy and borrowing

The cause of language change

:Course Books

1. Lyons, J. 2002. Language and Linguistics. Cambridge University Press.

2. Pool, S. 2000. An Introduction to Linguistics. MacMillan.

3. Yule, G. 1985. The Study of Language. 2nd Ed. Cambridge University

Press.

4. Radford, A. M. et al . 2000. Linguistics. An Introduction

Topics / Contents: The tutor should choose the teaching items that

 :contain

1. Talking about future plans (I <want <t o<become<a<doct or <

What <do<you<want <t o<become<et c )

2.Vocabulary items related to different professions (doct or z<

engi neer z< busi nessmanz< t eacher z< pol i ceman z<

sol di er z<et c J)

3.Requests and questions to ask for favour (Woul d< you<mi nd<

…Coul d<you<pl ease<…<et c JE<

4.Inviting others for a meal, party, get-together, etc. (Shal l < we<

have< a< cup< of < cof f ee<Woul d< you< pl ease< j oi n<

our <New<Year <par t y <et c J)

22

5.Accepting and refusing invitations (Ohz<sur e=<I ’m<af r ai d<I ’ve<

a<cl ass <now<Thank <you<f or <i nvi t i ng<me􀀀<I <wi sh<

I <had<t i me<t o<j oi n<you<et c J)

6.Vocabulary items related to different activities, games, hobbies,

interests,

etc. (phot ogr aphy z< pai nt i ng z< wr i t i ngz< danci ngz<

f oot bal l z<snacks z<cooki ngz<et c J)

7.Vocabulary items related to different professions (Far mi ngz<

bui l di ng< houses z< maki ng< wooden< t oys z< t he<

wor ks <of <a<car pent er z<bl acksmi t hz<gol dsmi t hz<

et c J)

References:

BBC English Conversation Practice

Doff, Adrian and Christopher Jones. Language<i n<UseJ<Cambridge:

C. U. P., 2004. Headway English Course

Student's Book: Craven, M. Real Listening & Speaking 1. "without answers"

Cambridge University Press, 2008.

Taylor, Grant. Engl i sh<Conver sat i on<Pr act i ceJ< New

Delhi: McGraw-Hill, 1983.

Teacher's Book: Craven, M. Real Listening & Speaking 1. "with answers"

Cambridge University Press, 2008.

:Course Content

1. Achieving Coherence

A) Coherence through Order

1) Space order

2) Time order

3) Order of importance

B) Coherence through Related Sentences

1) Repeating important words

2) Persistent Pronouns

3) Synonyms and substitutions

4) Transitional Expressions

2. Writing and Revising the Paragraph

a) Revising

b) Proofreading and Editing

c) Writing the Final Draft

d) Finished Paragraph format

1) Handwritten Format

2) Typed Format

3. Patterns of Paragraph Writing

1) Description

2) Process

3) Example

4) Opinion

5) Narration

6) Comparison/Contrast

7) Problem/Solution

:Course Book

1. Handouts

2. Savage & Shafiei. 2007. Effective Academic Writing 1 The Paragraph.

Oxford University Press.

3. Zemach & Rumisek. 2003. Academic Writing. From paragraph to essay.

Macmillan.

4. Oshima, A. & Hogue, A. 2006. Writing Academic English. 4th Ed.

Pearson Longman

Course Readers (Extensive Reading):

Fiction for learners of English at different levels from elementary to

advanced is the content of our extensive reading program. The series are

published by Oxford, Longman, Macmillan and Cambridge. These series

are specially written for learners of English as a second or foreign

language. They combine the highest quality of writing and storytelling with

great sensitivity to learners' linguistic needs. This combination ensures a

successful, enjoyable reading. They aims to:

1. Motivate learners to read in English.

2. Make reading a pleasure through positive language control and

information control.

3. Improve students' grammar.

4. Improve student's listening skills when they use the audio CDs.

5. Improve students' self expression.

Students' understanding of the readers is going to be examined by their

lecturer. In writing they are going to write a summary of the story or write

about their attitudes and points of view. In speaking they are going to

discuss certain points which will be decided by the lecturer. Whereas in

reading they are going to answer some comprehensive questions that

assess their understanding.

Students choose ONE<of the titles from one of the publishers decided by

the department. Each semester students are introduced to a publishers'

catalogue and allowed to choose a title according to their preferences. The

publishers are:

1. Oxford Readers

2. Cambridge Readers

3. Longman Readers

4. MacMillan Readers

10

:Course Book

Ray, R. R. & Yamanaka, J. 2007. Cover to Cover 2. Oxford University

Press.

1. Teacher's Book.

2. Student's Book.

3. Test Generator with customizable tests.

4. Audio CDs

:Course Content

1. Adjectives:

i. Derivation of Adjectives

ii. Order of Adjectives

iii. Adjectives as heads of noun phrases

2. The Future

i. Review

ii. Other ways of expressing the future

a) 'going to'. B) 'Will be doing', 'will have done'.

3. Passive Voice

4. Adverbs:

i. Derivation of Adverbs

ii. Adverbs and word order

iii. Some more adverbs

a) Adverbs of Degree (very, quite)

b) Quite & rather

c) Too & enough

5. Comparative and superlative forms of adjectives and adverbs

:Course Books

1. Eastwood, J. 2006. Oxford Practice Grammar. Intermediate. Oxford

University Press.

2. Murphy, R. 2000. Essential Grammar in Use. Elementary to preintermediate.

Cambridge University Press.

3. S. Clarke. Macmillan English Grammar in Context. Essential. Macmillan.