This publication fulfills both the teacher's need for a state-of-the-art overview of the main topics in discourse, and the student's need to acquire standards for developing research plans in theses and dissertations. It gives a combination of approaches from very different schools in discourse studies, ranging from argumentation theory to genre theory, from the study of multimodal metaphors to cognitive approaches to coherence analysis.
If you use a keyboard you need this book. Most of us use computers - many of us all the time - but how many of us can type properly? 'When you've learned how to touch type a 3000 word report will take you less than 1 hour to type!' With this book you can learn to 'touch type' in ten hours at a fraction of the cost of a course. It will also take you less time than the average course and, best of all, you can learn in your own home or office
English File is a flexible course for adults and young adults which reflects the realities of both learning and teaching. At each of the first two levels, there is a fast-track core of 60 hours' class work, with additional material which can extend the course to more than 120 hours. English File 1 is for beginners and false beginners.
Перед вами лучший курс от Random House. С его помощью вы сможете усовершенствовать свое произношение быстро, легко и эффективно. Не имеет значения ваш уровень английского - в любом случае этот курс поможет вам при общении с носителями языка чувствовать себя уверенно и непринужденно.
Improve your Pronunciation quickly, easily, and effectively with the simplest and most practical program available. No matter what your level of English is—this program will help you sound more natural and communicate with greater ease and confidence.
Added by: elena33333 | Karma: 348.29 | Fiction literature | 18 September 2009
15
For over six centuries, the University of Oxford had been an exclusively male bastion of privilege and opportunity. Few dreamed this could change. Yet, in 1879, twenty-one pioneering women quietly entered two recently established residence halls in Oxford in the hope of attending lectures and pursuing a course of study. More women soon followed and, by 1893, there were five women's societies, each with its own principal, staff, and identity.