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Английский язык. Практикум по аналитическому чтению и письменной речи

Вопрос id:1523676
Продолжите предложение: The alliterative movement was primarily confined to poets writing in northern and northwestern England,
?) in the development of English poetry from about 1350 proved much more durable.
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
?) who showed little regard for courtly, London-based literary developments.
?) where, tradition has it, the poet was born and brought up, and where he would have been open to the influence of the alliterative movement.
Вопрос id:1523677
Продолжите предложение: The alliterative movement would today be regarded as a curious but inconsiderable episode, were it not for four other poems now generally attributed to a single anonymous author: the chivalric romance Sir Gawayne and the Grene Knight, two homiletic poems called Patience and Purity (or Cleanness),
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
?) a Lollard piece called Pierce the Ploughman's Creed (c. 1395).
?) where, tradition has it, the poet was born and brought up, and where he would have been open to the influence of the alliterative movement.
?) and an elegiac dream vision known as Pearl, all miraculously preserved in a single manuscript dated c. 1400.
Вопрос id:1523678
Продолжите предложение: The art that conceals art was
?) a Lollard piece called Pierce the Ploughman's Creed (c. 1395).
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
?) also characteristicof the best popular and secular verse of the period, outside the courtly mode.
?) as being a poem of profound human sympathy and insight, it also has a marked philosophical dimension derived from Chaucer's reading of Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae, a work that he also translated in prose.
Вопрос id:1523679
Продолжите предложение: The author of some distinctive poems in this mode was John Audelay of Shropshire, whose style was heavily
?) influenced by the alliterative movement.
?) as being a poem of profound human sympathy and insight, it also has a marked philosophical dimension derived from Chaucer's reading of Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae, a work that he also translated in prose.
?) a Lollard piece called Pierce the Ploughman's Creed (c. 1395).
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
Вопрос id:1523680
Продолжите предложение: The authors of the later 14th-century alliterative poems either inherited or developed their own conventions,
?) Piers Plowman was issued as a printed book and was used for apologetic purposes by the early Protestants.
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
?) which resemble those of the Old English tradition in only the most general way.
?) quickly struck chords with his contemporaries.
Вопрос id:1523681
Продолжите предложение: The canon of Chaucer's works began to accumulate delightful but apocryphal trifles such as “The Flower and the Leaf”
?) where, tradition has it, the poet was born and brought up, and where he would have been open to the influence of the alliterative movement.
?) a Lollard piece called Pierce the Ploughman's Creed (c. 1395).
?) as being a poem of profound human sympathy and insight, it also has a marked philosophical dimension derived from Chaucer's reading of Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae, a work that he also translated in prose.
?) and “The Assembly of Ladies” (both c. 1475), the former, like a surprising quantity of 15th-century verse of this type, purportedly written by a woman.
Вопрос id:1523682
Продолжите предложение: The Confessio runs to some 33,000 lines in octosyllabic couplets and takes the form of a collection of exemplary tales
?) quickly struck chords with his contemporaries.
?) in the development of English poetry from about 1350 proved much more durable.
?) the diction of later Middle English alliterative verse were also distinctive, and the search for alliterating phrases and constructions led to the extensive use of archaic, technical, and dialectal words.
?) placed within the framework of a lover's confession to a priest of Venus.
Вопрос id:1523683
Продолжите предложение: The earliest examples of the phenomenon, William of Palerne and Winner and Waster, are both datable to the 1350s, but neither poem exhibits to the full all the characteristics of the slightly later poems central
?) as being a poem of profound human sympathy and insight, it also has a marked philosophical dimension derived from Chaucer's reading of Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae, a work that he also translated in prose.
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
?) to the movement.
Вопрос id:1523684
Продолжите предложение: The expression alliterative revival should not be taken to imply a return to
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
?) the principles of classical Old English versification.
?) a Lollard piece called Pierce the Ploughman's Creed (c. 1395).
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
Вопрос id:1523685
Продолжите предложение: The fact that all of these derived from various Latin sources suggests that the anonymous poets were
?) a Lollard piece called Pierce the Ploughman's Creed (c. 1395).
?) a wider audience by treating the metre more loosely and avoiding the arcane diction of the provincial poets.
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
?) likely to have been clerics with a strong, if bookish, historical sense of their romance “matters.”
Вопрос id:1523686
Продолжите предложение: The hero, a questing knight of Arthur's court, embodies a combination of the noblest chivalric and spiritual aspirations of the age, but instead of triumphing in the conventional way,
?) quickly struck chords with his contemporaries.
?) where, tradition has it, the poet was born and brought up, and where he would have been open to the influence of the alliterative movement.
?) he fails when tested (albeit rather unfairly) by mysterious supernatural powers.
?) a wider audience by treating the metre more loosely and avoiding the arcane diction of the provincial poets.
Вопрос id:1523687
Продолжите предложение: The jeweler-poet is vouchsafed a heavenly vision inwhich he sees his pearl, the discreet symbol used in the poem for
?) a lost infant daughter who has died to become a bride of Christ.
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
?) as being a poem of profound human sympathy and insight, it also has a marked philosophical dimension derived from Chaucer's reading of Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae, a work that he also translated in prose.
?) quickly struck chords with his contemporaries.
Вопрос id:1523688
Продолжите предложение: The most puzzling episode in the development of later Middle English literature was the apparently
?) quickly struck chords with his contemporaries.
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
?) as being a poem of profound human sympathy and insight, it also has a marked philosophical dimension derived from Chaucer's reading of Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae, a work that he also translated in prose.
?) sudden reappearance of unrhymed alliterative poetry in the mid-14th century.
Вопрос id:1523689
Продолжите предложение: The numerous 15th-century followers of Chaucer continued to treat the conventional range of courtly and moralizing
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
?) topics, but only rarely with the intelligence and stylistic accomplishment of their distinguished predecessors.
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
?) the diction of later Middle English alliterative verse were also distinctive, and the search for alliterating phrases and constructions led to the extensive use of archaic, technical, and dialectal words.
Вопрос id:1523690
Продолжите предложение: The Pearl stands somewhat aside from
?) the alliterative movement proper.
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
Вопрос id:1523691
Продолжите предложение: The poem takes the form of a series of dream visions dealing with the social and spiritual predicament of later
?) where, tradition has it, the poet was born and brought up, and where he would have been open to the influence of the alliterative movement.
?) a wider audience by treating the metre more loosely and avoiding the arcane diction of the provincial poets.
?) Piers Plowman was issued as a printed book and was used for apologetic purposes by the early Protestants.
?) 14th-century England against a sombre apocalyptic backdrop.
Вопрос id:1523692
Продолжите предложение: The poet of Sir Gawayne far exceeded the other alliterative writers in his mastery of form and style, and though
?) he wrote ultimately as a moralist, human warmth and sympathy (often taking comic form) were also close to the heart of his work.
?) a wider audience by treating the metre more loosely and avoiding the arcane diction of the provincial poets.
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
?) Piers Plowman was issued as a printed book and was used for apologetic purposes by the early Protestants.
Вопрос id:1523693
Продолжите предложение: The poet's principal achievement, however, was Sir Gawayne, in which he used the conventionalapparatus of
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
?) the diction of later Middle English alliterative verse were also distinctive, and the search for alliterating phrases and constructions led to the extensive use of archaic, technical, and dialectal words.
?) chivalric romance to engage in a serious exploration of man's moral conduct in the face of the unknown.
?) a wider audience by treating the metre more loosely and avoiding the arcane diction of the provincial poets.
Вопрос id:1523694
Продолжите предложение: The poet's technical competence in handling the difficult syntax and diction of the alliterative style is not, however, to be compared with that of Winner and Waster's author, who exhibits full mastery
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
?) of the form, particularly in brilliant descriptions of setting and spectacle.
?) Piers Plowman was issued as a printed book and was used for apologetic purposes by the early Protestants.
?) where, tradition has it, the poet was born and brought up, and where he would have been open to the influence of the alliterative movement.
Вопрос id:1523695
Продолжите предложение: The stock figures of the ardent but endlessly frustrated lover and the irresistible but disdainful lady were cultivated
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
?) a wider audience by treating the metre more loosely and avoiding the arcane diction of the provincial poets.
?) as part of the “game of love” depicted in numerous courtly lyrics.
Вопрос id:1523696
Продолжите предложение: The syntax and particularly the diction of later Middle English alliterative verse were also distinctive, and
?) quickly struck chords with his contemporaries.
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
?) the search for alliterating phrases and constructions led to the extensive use of archaic, technical, and dialectal words.
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
Вопрос id:1523697
Продолжите предложение: The “matter of Britain” was represented by an outstanding composition, the alliterative Morte Arthure,
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
?) as being a poem of profound human sympathy and insight, it also has a marked philosophical dimension derived from Chaucer's reading of Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae, a work that he also translated in prose.
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
?) an epic portrayal of King Arthur's conquests in Europe and his eventual fall, combining a strong narrative thrust with considerable density and subtlety of diction.
Вопрос id:1523698
Продолжите предложение: Their own painfully polysyllabic
?) in the development of English poetry from about 1350 proved much more durable.
?) a wider audience by treating the metre more loosely and avoiding the arcane diction of the provincial poets.
?) or “aureate” style unfortunately came to be widely imitated for more than a century.
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
Вопрос id:1523699
Продолжите предложение: This makes it a work of the utmost difficulty, defiant of categorization, but at the same time Langland never fails
?) Piers Plowman was issued as a printed book and was used for apologetic purposes by the early Protestants.
?) to convince the reader of the passionate integrity of his writing.
?) in the development of English poetry from about 1350 proved much more durable.
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
Вопрос id:1523700
Продолжите предложение: This poem's topical concern with social satire links it primarily with another, less formal body
?) the diction of later Middle English alliterative verse were also distinctive, and the search for alliterating phrases and constructions led to the extensive use of archaic, technical, and dialectal words.
?) and temperament might flourish, but they were encouraged and given direction by his genius in establishing English as a literary language.
?) of alliterative verse, of which William Langland's Piers Plowman was the principal representative and exemplar.
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
Вопрос id:1523701
Продолжите предложение: This poem's topical concern with social satire links it primarily with another, less formal body of alliterative verse,
?) as being a poem of profound human sympathy and insight, it also has a marked philosophical dimension derived from Chaucer's reading of Boethius' De consolatione philosophiae, a work that he also translated in prose.
?) of which William Langland's Piers Plowman was the principal representative and exemplar.
?) where, tradition has it, the poet was born and brought up, and where he would have been open to the influence of the alliterative movement.
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
Вопрос id:1523702
Продолжите предложение: Thomas Hoccleve, a minor civil servant who probably knew Chaucer and claimed to be his disciple, dedicated
?) his Regiment of Princes (c. 1412), culled from an earlier work of the same name, to the future Henry V.
?) quickly struck chords with his contemporaries.
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
Вопрос id:1523703
Продолжите предложение: Vernacular literacy spread rapidly among both lay men and women, the influence of French courtly love poetry remaining strong. Aristocratic and knightly versifiers such as Charles, duc d'Orléans (captured at Agincourt in 1415), his “jailer” William de la Pole, duke of Suffolk,
?) quickly struck chords with his contemporaries.
?) about 1350 and the first decade of the 15th century should be regarded as an “alliterative revival” or rather as the late flowering of a largely lost native tradition stretching back to the Old English period.
?) and Sir Richard Ros (translator of Alain Chartier's influential La Belle Dame sans merci) were widely read and imitated among the gentry and in bourgeois circles well into the 16th century.
?) about himself in the poem is true (and there is no other source of information), he laterlived obscurely in London as an unbeneficed cleric.
Вопрос id:1523704
Продолжите предложение: William Langland's long alliterative poem Piers Plowman begins with a vision of the world seen from the Malvern Hills in Worcestershire,
?) notably the seven-line stanza (rhyme royal) of the Parlement of Foules (c. 1382) and Troilus and Criseyde (c. 1385), and later was extended in the decasyllabic couplets of the prologue to the Legend of Good Women and large parts of The Canterbury Tales.
?) in the development of English poetry from about 1350 proved much more durable.
?) the diction of later Middle English alliterative verse were also distinctive, and the search for alliterating phrases and constructions led to the extensive use of archaic, technical, and dialectal words.
?) where, tradition has it, the poet was born and brought up, and where he would have been open to the influence of the alliterative movement.
Вопрос id:1523705
Продолжите предложение: William of Palerne, condescendingly commissioned by a nobleman for the benefit of “them that know no French,”
?) is a homely paraphrase of a courtly continental romance, the only poem in the group to take love as its central theme.
?) a wider audience by treating the metre more loosely and avoiding the arcane diction of the provincial poets.
?) a Lollard piece called Pierce the Ploughman's Creed (c. 1395).
?) where, tradition has it, the poet was born and brought up, and where he would have been open to the influence of the alliterative movement.
Вопрос id:1523706

Данное предложение является простым?

А) As soon as Sanskrit became known to the Western learned world the unravelling of comparative Indo-European grammar ensued and the foundations were laid for the whole 19th-century edifice of comparative philology and historical linguistics.

В) Whereas in ancient Chinese learning a separate field of study that might be called grammar scarcely took root, in ancient India a sophisticated version of this discipline developed early alongside the other sciences.

Подберите правильный ответ

?) А - нет, В - нет
?) А - да, В - нет
?) А - нет, В - да
?) А - да, В - да
Вопрос id:1523707

Данное предложение является простым?

А) But, for this, Sanskrit was simply a part of the data; Indian grammatical learning played almost no direct part.

В) A study of Indian logic in relation to Pāṇinian grammar alongside Aristotelian and Western logic in relation to Greek grammar and its successors could bring illuminating insights.

Подберите правильный ответ

?) А - нет, В - нет
?) А - нет, В - да
?) А - да, В - да
?) А - да, В - нет
Вопрос id:1523708

Данное предложение является простым?

А) It meant the study of the values of the letters and of accentuation and prosody and, in this sense, was an abstract intellectual discipline; and it also meant the skill of literacy and thus embraced applied pedagogy.

В) Yet modern specialists in the field still share their concerns and interests.

Подберите правильный ответ

?) А - нет, В - нет
?) А - да, В - нет
?) А - нет, В - да
?) А - да, В - да
Вопрос id:1523709

Данное предложение является простым?

А) Most of the developments associated with theoretical grammar grew out of philosophy and criticism; and in these developments a repeated duality of themes crosses and intertwines.

В) Aelius Donatus, of the 4th century AD, and Priscian, an African of the 6th century, and their colleagues were slightly more systematic than their Greek models but were essentially retrospective rather than original.

Подберите правильный ответ

?) А - нет, В - да
?) А - нет, В - нет
?) А - да, В - да
?) А - да, В - нет
Вопрос id:1523710

Данное предложение является простым?

А) Nineteenth-century workers, however, recognized that the native tradition of phonetics in ancient India was vastly superior to Western knowledge; and this had important consequences for the growth of the science of phonetics in the West.

В) As might be imagined, this perceptive Indian grammatical work has held great fascination for 20th-century theoretical linguists.

Подберите правильный ответ

?) А - да, В - нет
?) А - нет, В - нет
?) А - да, В - да
?) А - нет, В - да
Вопрос id:1523711

Данное предложение является простым?

А) The emergence of grammatical learning in Greece is less clearly known than is sometimes implied, and the subject is more complex than is often supposed; here only the main strands can be sampled.

В) And the philologic alanalogists with their regularizing surface segmentation show striking kinship of spirit with the modern school of structural (or taxonomic or glossematic) grammatical theorists.

Подберите правильный ответ

?) А - да, В - да
?) А - нет, В - да
?) А - да, В - нет
?) А - нет, В - нет
Вопрос id:1523712

Данное предложение является простым?

А) The term hē grammatikē technē (“the art of letters”) had two senses.

В) The anomalists, who concentrated on surface irregularity and who looked then for regularities deeper down (as the Stoics sought them in logic) bear a resemblanceto contemporary scholars of the transformationalist school.

Подберите правильный ответ

?) А - да, В - да
?) А - нет, В - нет
?) А - нет, В - да
?) А - да, В - нет
Вопрос id:1523713

Данное предложение является простым?

А) There are three major ways in which the Sanskrit tradition has had an impact on modern linguistic scholarship.

В) Even though the study of Sanskrit grammar may originally have had the practical aim of keeping the sacred Vedic texts and their commentaries pure and intact, the study of grammar in India in the 1st millennium BC had already become an intellectual end in itself.

Подберите правильный ответ

?) А - да, В - нет
?) А - нет, В - нет
?) А - нет, В - да
?) А - да, В - да
Вопрос id:1523714

Данное предложение является простым?

А) Thirdly, there is in the rules or definitions (sutras) of Pāṇini a remarkably subtle and penetrating account of Sanskrit grammar.

В) The construction of sentences, compound nouns, and the like is explained through ordered rules operating on underlying structures in a manner strikingly similar in part to modes of contemporary theory.

Подберите правильный ответ

?) А - нет, В - да
?) А - да, В - нет
?) А - нет, В - нет
?) А - да, В - да
Вопрос id:1523715

Данное предложение является простым?

А) This side of what was to become “grammatical” learning was distinctly applied, particular, and less exalted by comparison with other pursuits.

В) Up to this point a field that was at times called ars grammatica was a congeries of investigations, both theoretical and practical, drawn from the work and interests of literacy, scribeship, logic, epistemology, rhetoric, textual philosophy, poetics, and literary criticism.

Подберите правильный ответ

?) А - нет, В - нет
?) А - да, В - да
?) А - нет, В - да
?) А - да, В - нет
Вопрос id:1523716

Продолжите предложение: The linguist, though he may be interested in written texts and in the development of languages through time, tends

?) now considered as Saussurean can be seen, though less clearly, in the earlier work of Humboldt, and the general structural principles that Saussure was to develop with respect to synchronic linguistics in the Cours had been applied almost 40 years before (1879) by Saussure himself in a reconstruction of the Indo-European vowel system.
?) to give priority to spoken languages and to the problems of analyzing them as they operate at a given point in time.
?) in the 19th century was the development of the comparative method, which comprised a set of principles whereby languages could be systematically compared with respect to their sound systems, grammatical structure, and vocabulary and shown to be “genealogically” related.
Вопрос id:1523717
Продолжите предложение: The ability of the human eye to distinguish colors is based upon the varying sensitivity of different cells
?) the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European word for “ten,” *dekm, it was possible to derive Sanskrit daśa, Greek déka, Latin decem, and Gothic taihun by postulating a number of different sound laws that operated independently in the different branches of the Indo-European family.
?) and studied Latin, a language that, though not their native tongue, was one in which they were very much at home; such scholars in groups must often have represented a highly varied linguistic background.
?) in the retina to light of different wavelengths.
?) now considered as Saussurean can be seen, though less clearly, in the earlier work of Humboldt, and the general structural principles that Saussure was to develop with respect to synchronic linguistics in the Cours had been applied almost 40 years before (1879) by Saussure himself in a reconstruction of the Indo-European vowel system.
Вопрос id:1523718
Продолжите предложение: The most important aspect of colour
?) who largely took over, with mild adaptations to their highly similar language, the total work of the Greeks, are important not as originators but as transmitters.
?) defined a sentence as a unit of sense or thought, but it is difficult to be sure of his precise meaning.
?) in daily life is probably the one that is least defined and most variable.
?) is suggested by the headings in his work: pronunciation, poetic figurative language, difficult words, true and inner meanings of words, exposition of form-classes, literary criticism.
Вопрос id:1523719
Продолжите предложение: These effects, combined, are summarized also in the Kruithof curve, that describes the change of color perception and pleasingness
?) whether grammarians or philosophers discovered grammar, whether grammar was the same for all languages, what the fundamental topic of grammar was, and what the basic and irreducible grammatical primes are.
?) of light as function of temperature and intensity.
?) in the 19th century was the development of the comparative method, which comprised a set of principles whereby languages could be systematically compared with respect to their sound systems, grammatical structure, and vocabulary and shown to be “genealogically” related.
?) now considered as Saussurean can be seen, though less clearly, in the earlier work of Humboldt, and the general structural principles that Saussure was to develop with respect to synchronic linguistics in the Cours had been applied almost 40 years before (1879) by Saussure himself in a reconstruction of the Indo-European vowel system.
Вопрос id:1523720
Продолжите предложение: Because the curves overlap, some
?) were actually written, it is only in particular cases and for specific details (e.g., a mild alteration in the number of parts of speech or cases of nouns) that real departures from Roman grammar can be noted. Likewise, until the end of the 19th century, grammars of the exotic languages, written largely by missionaries and traders, were cast almost entirely in the Roman model, to which the Renaissance had added a limited medieval syntactic ingredient.
?) the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European word for “ten,” *dekm, it was possible to derive Sanskrit daśa, Greek déka, Latin decem, and Gothic taihun by postulating a number of different sound laws that operated independently in the different branches of the Indo-European family.
?) tristimulus values do not occur for any incoming light combination.
Вопрос id:1523721
Продолжите предложение: For each location in the visual field,
?) were actually written, it is only in particular cases and for specific details (e.g., a mild alteration in the number of parts of speech or cases of nouns) that real departures from Roman grammar can be noted. Likewise, until the end of the 19th century, grammars of the exotic languages, written largely by missionaries and traders, were cast almost entirely in the Roman model, to which the Renaissance had added a limited medieval syntactic ingredient.
?) by analyzing them in terms of categories derived from the analysis of the more familiar Indo-European languages.
?) the three types of cones yield three signals based on the extent to which each is stimulated.
?) parted company with its older fellow disciplines within philosophy as they moved over to the domain known as natural science, and technical academic grammatical study has increasingly become involved with issues represented by empiricism versus rationalism and their successor manifestations on the academic scene.
Вопрос id:1523722
Продолжите предложение: For example, it is not possible to stimulate only the mid-wavelength (so-called "green") cones; the other cones will inevitably
?) be stimulated to some degree at the same time.
?) were actually written, it is only in particular cases and for specific details (e.g., a mild alteration in the number of parts of speech or cases of nouns) that real departures from Roman grammar can be noted. Likewise, until the end of the 19th century, grammars of the exotic languages, written largely by missionaries and traders, were cast almost entirely in the Roman model, to which the Renaissance had added a limited medieval syntactic ingredient.
?) development of the Western grammatical tradition, work of this genre was the second great milestone after the crystallization of Greek thought with the Stoics and Alexandrians.
?) genre of writing involves simultaneous consideration of grammatical distinctions and scholastic logic; modern linguists are probably inadequately trained to deal with these writings.
Вопрос id:1523723
Продолжите предложение: Furthermore, the rods are barely
?) for many of the exotic languages scholarship barely passed beyond the most rudimentary initial collection of word lists; grammatical analysis was scarcely approached.
?) sensitive to light in the "red" range.
?) in the 19th century was the development of the comparative method, which comprised a set of principles whereby languages could be systematically compared with respect to their sound systems, grammatical structure, and vocabulary and shown to be “genealogically” related.
Вопрос id:1523724
Продолжите предложение: Humans being trichromatic,
?) were actually written, it is only in particular cases and for specific details (e.g., a mild alteration in the number of parts of speech or cases of nouns) that real departures from Roman grammar can be noted. Likewise, until the end of the 19th century, grammars of the exotic languages, written largely by missionaries and traders, were cast almost entirely in the Roman model, to which the Renaissance had added a limited medieval syntactic ingredient.
?) tended to emphasize, if not to exaggerate, the structural uniqueness of individual languages.
?) development of the Western grammatical tradition, work of this genre was the second great milestone after the crystallization of Greek thought with the Stoics and Alexandrians.
?) the retina contains three types of color receptor cells, or cones.
Вопрос id:1523725
Продолжите предложение: In certain conditions of intermediate illumination, the rod response and a weak cone response can together result in
?) whether grammarians or philosophers discovered grammar, whether grammar was the same for all languages, what the fundamental topic of grammar was, and what the basic and irreducible grammatical primes are.
?) the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European word for “ten,” *dekm, it was possible to derive Sanskrit daśa, Greek déka, Latin decem, and Gothic taihun by postulating a number of different sound laws that operated independently in the different branches of the Indo-European family.
?) color discriminations not accounted for by cone responses alone.
?) who prepared the way for the later phase of what is now thought of as the most distinctive manifestation of American “structuralism.”
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