Tatyana
What does 'chunks of language' mean? Yes, I have. I 'm trying to learn the articals from 'BBC Learning English'. These are about how I should learn the language without dictionaries and grammar books, only - listening to. There is 'series is all about chunks of language'.
25 de jun. de 2012 17:56
Respuestas · 5
2
In linguistics, it means groups of words that form common phrases (e.g., "How do you do?"). The theory is that we learn these as if they were single, very long words: we don't form these phrases by thinking of each word individually and then grouping them.
25 de junio de 2012
1
chunk дословно переводится как ломоть. Из этого следует, что это какая-то часть языка ( граматика, аудирование, устная речь и т.д.). На мой взгляд это так.
25 de junio de 2012
Yes, I have. I 'm trying to learn the articals (articles) from 'BBC Learning English'. These are about how I should learn the language without dictionaries and grammar books, only - listening to. There is 'series is all about chunks of language'. A "chunk of language" means a section ...for example phrases relating to time, or colours, or daily routine etc etc
26 de junio de 2012
It is close to mind that it means some kind of partitioning of a language. But I've found this article that could give some insight about it: http://whatsnewintheworld.blogspot.com/2009/05/chunks-of-language.html I hope that helps!
25 de junio de 2012
Do you have any context?
25 de junio de 2012
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