- 10
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archaisms
- 11
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stem
- A.It is always better than a British dictionary.
- B.It contains more encyclopedic information in the main body.
- C.One can never expect to find British usages in it.
- D.It includes more grammatical information.
- A.Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary of Current English with Chinese Translation.
- B.A New English-Chinese Dictionary.
- C.Longman Dictionary of Phrasal Verbs.
- D.A Chinese-English Dictionary (1995).
- A.The Word Book Dictionary
- B.The Encyclopedia Americana
- C.Webster’s New World Dictionary
- D.Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
- A.dismembering
- B.position-shifting
- C.addition
- D.shortening
- A.verbal
- B.nominal
- C.adjectival
- D.adverbial
- A.simile
- B.metaphor
- C.metonymy
- D.personification
- A.It can be subdivided into grammatical context and lexical context.
- B.It embraces the people, time and place.
- C.It refers to the words, clauses, sentences in which a word appears.
- D.It may cover a paragraph, a whole chapter and even the entire book.
- A.Linguistic context.
- B.Non-linguistic context.
- C.Extra-linguistic context.
- D.Intra-linguistic context.
- A.Grammatical structure.
- B.Polysemy.
- C.Antonymy.
- D.Hyponymy.
- A.sense
- B.reference
- C.association
- D.transfer
- A.elevated
- B.degraded
- C.narrowed
- D.extended
- A.creative
- B.conservative
- C.radical
- D.constructive
- A.close-synonyms
- B.respondent-synonyms
- C.near-synonyms
- D.dependent-synonyms
- A.derivation
- B.deterioration
- C.purification
- D.pejoration
- A.hyponyms ... homonyms
- B.homonyms ... hyponyms
- C.synonyms ... antonyms
- D.antonyms ...synonyms
- A.spelling
- B.pronunciation
- C.meaning
- D.sound
- A.Reference
- B.Concept
- C.Sense
- D.Motivation
- A.grammatical meaning
- B.lexical meaning
- C.conceptual meaning
- D.associative meaning
- A.Prefixation
- B.Suffixation
- C.Affixation
- D.Derivation
- A.adjective compounds
- B.noun compounds
- C.verb compounds
- D.adverb compounds
- A.happier
- B.worker
- C.harder
- D.taller
- A.International.
- B.Nation.
- C.National.
- D.Internationalists.
- A.borrowing
- B.semantic change
- C.word-formation
- D.reviving archaic words
- A.English is more closely related to German than French.
- B.Scandinavian languages refer to Icelandic, Norwegian, Danish and Swedish.
- C.Old English vocabulary was in essence Germanic with a small quantity of words borrowed from Latin and Scandinavian.
- D.Middle English absorbed a tremendous number of foreign words but with little change in word endings.
- A.1
- B.2
- C.3
- D.4
- A.civilization
- B.revolution
- C.colonization
- D.industrialization
- A.Eastern
- B.Southern
- C.Western
- D.Northern
- A.3
- B.4
- C.5
- D.6
- A.Father.
- B.Fire.
- C.Evil.
- D.Old.
- A.the fact of more phonemes than letters in English
- B.stabilization of spelling by printing
- C.influence of the work of scribes
- D.innovations made by linguists