slang英语俚语集锦文化课件.ppt
《slang英语俚语集锦文化课件.ppt》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《slang英语俚语集锦文化课件.ppt(103页珍藏版)》请在三一办公上搜索。
1、Snail mail,Letters sent through the post office; mail that is carried, as opposed to e-mail.Example:1) It can take a week to send a letter by snail mail.2) I sent the payment by snail mail so you should get it by next Friday.Etymology:A snail is a very slow-moving creature. This slang phrase mocks t
2、he slowness of regular mail and implicitly compares it to the speed of e-mail.,What is “Informal English?”,No living language is simply one set of words which can be used the same way in all situations. This means is that there are many ways to say the same thing, depending on where you are, who you
3、 are talking to, and how you feel. You are all advanced enough in your study of English to realize that you do not talk to a roommate the same way you would talk to your roommates mother. You do not talk to a bartender the same way you would talk to a judge. You do not refuse a panhandler with the s
4、ame words you would use to refuse a second helping of mashed potatoes at a formal dinner.,What are “Informal Situations?”,When and where is Informal English appropriate? The are many situations in everyday life where informal English is allowed, even preferred. Some examples include: While playing s
5、ports While studying with friends At a bar or informal restaurant At a party or reunion While watching a sporting event With close family members With friends while shopping, studying or hanging out At work (depending on your job) On a date At the movies,What is “Slang?”,Slang is a subset of a langu
6、age used by one particular group. It consists of words and expressions which will not be found in the dictionary, and can be distortions of existing words or entirely invented terms. It is used in informal situations. It is not appropriate in formal situations.Examples: pooped, to down a drink, thre
7、ads, bonkers, basket case, etc. Slang words may or may not have alternative literal meanings. They may be made up words.,Do you know any slang?,What is an idiom?,IDIOM - A phrase that is commonly understood in a given culture or subculture to have a meaning different from its literal meaning. A good
8、 example of this is to bend over backwards. This phrase is commonly understood in our culture to mean to exert an enormous effort in order to accomplish something. The literal meaning, however, is the physical act it describes, of which few may actually be capable of doing!,Is Slang Only Used By The
9、 Lower Classes?,Absolutely not! There is universal slang that is used by everyone. However, there are many subcategories of slang used by specific groups. Slang can be seen as a family tree with universal slang at the top representing words that are not only used consistently in the media, but by vi
10、rtually everyone. This huge category of terms and expressions spans all ages, social groups and economic groups with such common words and expressions as: to be ticked off to pig out to stand someone up to get ones second wind to be wiped out to get canned,Abbreviations & Acronyms,There are commonly
11、 used initials which represent complete sentences, another important category to be conquered by the nonnative speaker. Although they sound completely normal to native speakers, to the outsiders, they are nothing but a meaningless string of letters.Imagine how a secretary, whose first language is no
12、t English, would respond upon being given the following information: FYI, the CEO wants you to pick up a BLT and an OJ for the VP ASAP. OK? Abbreviations and acronyms are a large part of our daily language, many of which are used commonly yet whose literal meaning is unknown even by native speakers;
13、 for example, LASER (light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation), SCUBA (self-contained underwater breathing apparatus), and TIP (to insure promptness).,Specific Groups & Slang,Just below universal slang on the family tree are subcategories used by specific groups such as teens, rappers
14、, surfers, different trades, economic groups, and racial groups; there is even regional slang. Many of these subcategories contain their own very colorful expressions. For example: TEENS: Our home-ec (home economics) teacher is really phat (beautiful) and her class is the bomb (great)!RAPPERS: Hey,
15、homie (friend)! Why you wallin (being a wall flower) instead a bustin a move (dancing) to that def jam (great music)?SURFERS: The big mamas (ocean) fully mackin (pumping out) some gnarly grinders (huge waves) with corduroy to the horizon (one after the other).DINER WAITERS/WAITRESSES (from the 1950s
16、): Gimme a cold pig on a green sea (ham sandwich with lettuce), burn 50 (on toast) and put shoes on em; theyre going for a walk (to go)!DOCTORS: We need to gork (anesthetize) the patient before calling in the blade (surgeon).SOME SOUTHERNERS: Im more scared than a long-tailed cat in a room full a ro
17、ckin chairs or Im more scared than a porcupine in a balloon factory.,Around the World,Slang and idioms are used throughout the world, and many of our own common expressions have equivalents in other languages in other places. For example:AMERICAN: Youll pulling my leg!FRENCH: Tu te paies ma tete! (l
18、iterally: Youre treating yourself to my head!)SPANISH: !Me estas tomando el pelo! (literally: Youre taking my hair!)GERMAN: Du willst mich wohl auf den Arm nehmen! (literally: You want to take me up the arm!),American Slang,The USA is a huge country, so there is not a lot of American slang that is u
19、sed across the country. You are more likely to see regional slang or ethnic slang. Some terms that would be recognized by any American would include Dude, Pal, Buddy - man or friend Cash - paper money Bread, Dough - any money Cool, Hot, Hip - very popular, something or someone that others want to em
20、ulate Spud - potato Cop - police officer Bathroom, Restroom, john, can - toilet Chicken - afraid Mad - angry Dirty - obscene Nuts, A Nut- crazy, eccentric Pissed - urinated,African-American Slang,The African-American subculture has spawned many slang terms that are recognized in most parts of the co
21、untry. These include Yo - greeting, hello, attention-getting word Homie, brotha - friend, comrade Sup - whats up, whats going on Hood - neighborhood Tight - close, good friends Dawg - man, friend Word - true Dis - to disrespect, to insult Gangsta - gangster or gangster-imitator,What is Jargon?,A spe
22、cial language belonging exclusively to a group, often a profession. Engineers, lawyers, doctors, tax analysts, and the like all use jargon to exchange complex information efficiently. Jargon is often unintelligible to those outside the group that uses it. For example, here is a passage from a comput
23、er manual with the jargon underlined: “The RZ887-x current loop interface allows the computer to use a centronics blocked duplex protocol.”,Is It Okay To Use Slang In Business?,Business is notorious for creating a slang or jargon of its own. Clearly, a nonnative speaker who doesnt have a working kno
24、wledge of business jargon would be at a loss. Imagine someone not familiar with idioms being told during a meeting that he or she has the floor or being asked to take the ball and run with it.The following paragraph would surely go over the head of the average nonnative speaker, yet the terms and ex
25、pressions are certainly common in the business world (and this is just the tip of the iceberg): I dont know who blew the whistle on Bernie, the paper pusher in accounting, but he just got called on the carpet by the big wigs for calling in sick again. If he doesnt pull it together soon, hes gonna ge
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- slang 英语 俚语 集锦 文化 课件
链接地址:https://www.31ppt.com/p-1566229.html