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What is language? Present different views on the definition and describe four properties of language. commencer à apprendre
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Language is a system of communication that uses sounds or symbols to convey meaning; its properties include arbitrariness, productivity, displacement and duality.
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Compare English to Polish – similarities and differences. commencer à apprendre
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Both are Indo-European languages with subject-verb-object word order, but English relies on strict syntax, whereas Polish uses rich inflection; Polish has grammatical gender, while English does not.
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Define each of the following fields of linguistics and their area of interest: phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics. commencer à apprendre
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Phonetics – speech sounds and their articulation. Phonology – how sounds function in a language. Morphology – word formation and structure. Syntax – sentence structure. Semantics – meaning in language. Pragmatics – language in context.
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What are the origins of human language? How do we know what a given language looked like in the past? commencer à apprendre
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Theories include divine, evolutionary, and social origins; historical linguistics and comparative reconstruction help trace linguistic changes.
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What are: natural languages, ethnic languages, pidgin languages, dialects, idiolects, artificial languages? commencer à apprendre
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Natural languages – evolved over time (English). Ethnic languages (Navajo). Pidgin languages – simplified (Tok Pisin). Dialects – regional or social. Idiolects – an individual's unique language. Artificial languages – intentionally created (Esperanto)
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What are the features of (the do’s and don’ts) formal essays and academic writing? commencer à apprendre
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Formal essays require clear thesis statements, structured arguments, objective tone, citations, and avoidance of contractions, slang, and personal opinions.
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What is rhetoric? Give examples of rhetorical devices. commencer à apprendre
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Rhetoric is the art of persuasion; examples include metaphors, alliteration, anaphora, and rhetorical questions.
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What is the difference between literal and figurative language? Give some examples of literary devices. commencer à apprendre
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Literal language means exactly what it says, while figurative language includes metaphors (e.g., "Time is a thief"), similes, and personification.
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What is the Renaissance? Provide its timeframe and express how it impacted the then aspects of cultural life. How did it differ from the previous era? commencer à apprendre
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The Renaissance (14th–17th century) was a revival of classical art, literature, and science, emphasizing humanism, contrasting the religious focus of the Middle Ages.
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Characterize different literary genres and subgenres. commencer à apprendre
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Genres include fiction (novel, short story), non-fiction (biography, essay), poetry (lyric, epic), and drama (tragedy, comedy).
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What are the differences and similarities between L1 and L2 development? commencer à apprendre
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L1 acquisition is natural and subconscious, while L2 learning requires conscious effort and may involve interference from L1.
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Describe the idea of nativism proposed by Noam Chomsky. commencer à apprendre
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Chomsky's nativism suggests humans have an innate Language Acquisition Device (LAD) that enables learning of any language.
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Compare the approach to progress and to errors in behaviorism, nativism, cognitivism, and interactionism. commencer à apprendre
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Behaviorism, errors need correction. Nativism, errors reflect internal grammar formation. Cognitivism, errors are developmental. Interactionism, errors indicate negotiation of meaning.
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Present the theory of acquisition proposed by Stephen Krashen. commencer à apprendre
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Krashen's theory includes five hypotheses: acquisition-learning, monitor, input, affective filter, and natural order.
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How do we teach one language subsystem (grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation, functions)? commencer à apprendre
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Effective teaching involves explicit instruction, practice activities, contextual examples, and communicative tasks.
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How do we train one language skill (reading, listening, speaking, writing)? commencer à apprendre
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Training involves exposure, practice, scaffolding, feedback, and integration into real-life tasks.
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What is learner autonomy and how to promote it as a teacher and as a learner? commencer à apprendre
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Learner autonomy is the ability to self-direct learning, fostered through self-assessment, goal-setting, and independent practice.
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Describe three selected mainstream methods of (or approaches to) teaching English as a foreign language. commencer à apprendre
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Grammar-translation – focus on rules and translation. Direct method – immersive, without translation. Communicative approach – emphasis on interaction and real-life use.
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What are the so-called “fringe methods” of teaching English as a foreign language? Describe three of them. commencer à apprendre
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Fringe methods include Suggestopedia (relaxation-based), Silent Way (minimal teacher intervention), and TPR (physical movement-based learning).
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Kompetencja językowa a kompetencja komunikacyjna – charakterystyka i porównanie pojęć. commencer à apprendre
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Kompetencja językowa to znajomość gramatyki i słownictwa, a komunikacyjna obejmuje również umiejętność skutecznego użycia języka w interakcji.
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Neurofizjologiczne podłoże języka – omów ośrodki języka w mózgu. commencer à apprendre
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Główne ośrodki to ośrodek Broki (produkcja mowy) i ośrodek Wernickego (rozumienie), zlokalizowane w lewej półkuli.
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Model procesu komunikacji z uwzględnieniem psychologicznego wymiaru aktu komunikacji – scharakteryzuj wybrany model. commencer à apprendre
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Model Shannona-Weavera przedstawia komunikację jako transmisję informacji przez nadawcę, kanał, odbiorcę z możliwością zakłóceń i sprzężenia zwrotnego.
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Specyficzne a niespecyficzne zaburzenia mowy i języka – określ różnice między nimi. commencer à apprendre
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Specyficzne (np. SLI) dotyczą tylko języka, niespecyficzne (np. afazja) wynikają z problemów neurologicznych.
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What is “a phoneme” and “an allophone” and in what situation 2 sounds are phonologically distinct (contrastive)? Provide examples. commencer à apprendre
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A phoneme is a distinct sound unit (e.g., /p/ and /b/ in "pat" vs. "bat"), while allophones are variations of a phoneme (e.g., aspirated vs. unaspirated /p/).
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Describe the articulatory tract and the involvement of different organs in speech production. commencer à apprendre
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The articulatory tract includes the lungs (airflow), larynx (voice production), and oral/nasal cavities (sound shaping) with key organs like the tongue, lips, and palate modifying speech sounds.
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Describe the vowel system of English. Include diphthongs and triphthongs. commencer à apprendre
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English vowels include short (/ɪ, e, æ/), long (/iː, uː, ɑː/), diphthongs (/aɪ, eɪ, ɔɪ/), and triphthongs (/aʊə, eɪə/), differing in tongue position and rounding.
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Describe the consonant system of English. commencer à apprendre
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English consonants are categorized by place (bilabial, dental, velar), manner (plosive, fricative, nasal), and voicing (voiced vs. voiceless).
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Explain the nature of stress and intonation. What different types of stress and intonation do we distinguish? commencer à apprendre
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Stress highlights syllables (word stress: 'REcord vs. re'CORD), while intonation conveys meaning, emotions, and sentence type (falling for statements, rising for yes/no questions).
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Describe phonological processes that take place in connected speech. commencer à apprendre
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Connected speech involves assimilation (sound changes, e.g., "input" → [ɪnpʊt]), elision (sound omission, e.g., "friends" → [frɛnz]), and linking (/r/ in "far away" → [fa: r ə'weɪ]).
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What are the functions of modal verbs? Name at least five modal verbs and give examples. commencer à apprendre
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Modal verbs (can, must, may, should, will) express ability ("I can swim"), obligation ("You must go"), possibility ("It may rain"), advice ("You should study"), and certainty ("He will come").
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List and briefly describe main derivational processes in English. commencer à apprendre
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Derivation involves adding prefixes (un+happy) or suffixes (kind+ness), conversion (change word class, e.g., "to Google"), compounding ("toothbrush"), blending ("brunch"), and clipping ("ad" from "advertisement").
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List and briefly describe types of sentences in English. Give examples. commencer à apprendre
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English sentences include declarative ("She runs"), interrogative ("Does she run?"), imperative ("Run!"), and exclamatory ("What a day!"), classified by function and complexity (simple, compound, complex).
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What does it mean that language has a phrase structure? What is a phrase (describe and give examples of different phrases)? commencer à apprendre
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Phrase structure means sentences are built hierarchically; types include noun phrases ("the big house"), verb phrases ("is running"), and prepositional phrases ("in the park").
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Word classes in English: categories, sub-categories, essential defining features of each category and subcategory. Provide examples. commencer à apprendre
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English has nouns (countable/uncountable), verbs (transitive/intransitive), adjectives (comparative/superlative), adverbs, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, and interjections, e.g., "quickly" (adverb), "but" (conjunction).
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List lexical relations in language and give examples in English. commencer à apprendre
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Lexical relations include synonymy (big/large), antonymy (hot/cold), homonymy (bank: river/bank: finance), hyponymy (rose is a flower), and polysemy (light: not heavy / illumination).
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What is a morpheme? What are: free, bound, inflectional and derivational morphemes? commencer à apprendre
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A morpheme is the smallest meaning-bearing unit; free (can stand alone, e.g., "cat"), bound (must attach, e.g., "-s"), inflectional (grammatical, e.g., "-ed"), derivational (creates new words, e.g., "un-").
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What are state verbs that do not normally have continuous tenses? Provide examples. commencer à apprendre
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State verbs describe conditions, not actions (e.g., "believe," "love," "own") and do not take continuous forms (*"I am knowing" is incorrect).
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Describe problems resulting from lexical contrast between English and Polish and provide examples. commencer à apprendre
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False cognates cause confusion, e.g., "actual" (Eng.) means "real," not "aktualny" (Pol.); phrasal verbs (e.g., "give up") lack direct Polish equivalents.
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Describe problems resulting from word order contrast between English and Polish and provide examples. commencer à apprendre
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English follows strict SVO order ("I love you"), while Polish allows flexibility ("Kocham cię" vs. "Cię kocham"), affecting sentence processing.
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Describe problems resulting from gender contrast between English and Polish and provide examples. commencer à apprendre
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Polish has grammatical gender (e.g., "pies" – masculine, "kotka" – feminine), while English mainly uses natural gender ("dog" for both genders), leading to translation challenges.
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Characterize the literary genre of novel and give some examples of Charles Dickens’ novels. commencer à apprendre
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A novel is a long narrative fiction; Dickens' works include Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, Great Expectations, known for social critique.
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What is transcendentalism and who are its best-known representatives? commencer à apprendre
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Transcendentalism (19th-century American movement) emphasized intuition and nature; key figures include Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau.
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Present the conflict known as “the Troubles.” commencer à apprendre
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The Troubles (1960s–1998) was a conflict in Northern Ireland between unionists (pro-UK) and republicans (pro-Ireland), marked by violence and political tension.
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How big is the territory and the number of people in the US? Please describe in detail three different states. commencer à apprendre
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The US covers ~9.8 million km² with ~330 million people; California is the most populous, Texas is the second-largest by area, and Florida is known for tourism.
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What is New England? What accounts for its specific status? commencer à apprendre
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New England (northeastern US) includes six states, known for colonial history, elite universities (Harvard, Yale), and distinct cultural identity.
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Who was Martin Luther King Junior? What was his method of fighting for freedom? How did technology help him? How, when, and where did King Junior die? commencer à apprendre
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MLK Jr. was a civil rights leader advocating nonviolence; television and radio spread his message; assassinated in Memphis, 1968.
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Who was King Alfred? When did he live? What is he remembered for? commencer à apprendre
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Alfred the Great (849–899) defended England against Vikings, promoted education, and strengthened laws.
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Who were the Pilgrim Fathers? When and where did they arrive in America? For what reasons? Give the name of the ship on which the Pilgrim Fathers went there. commencer à apprendre
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Pilgrim Fathers were English Puritans seeking religious freedom; arrived in Plymouth in 1620 aboard the Mayflower.
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