Special | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | ALL
A |
---|
abstract nounA noun which refers to an abstract idea (e.g., peace, love, understanding) rather than something tangible. See concrete noun. | |
accuracyCorrect use of a language system in terms of grammar, pronunciation and vocabulary. In teaching we are trying to help students achieve both accuracy and fluency. | ||
accuracy-based activitiesAccuracy-based activities are classroom (or homework) activities whose main focus is producing, selecting or perceiving correct forms (compare with fluency-based activities). | ||
acquisitionThe process of getting to know a language through exposure to it, rather than through consciously studying it. Young children acquire their first language. A distinction is often made between language acquisition and language learning, though people who are studying a foreign language probably acquire a large proportion of it, i.e., get to know it without consciously studying and memorising it. | |
adjectiveA word which describes a noun. E.g., an old man, a difficult question, or my hair is red. . | |
adverbA word or phrase that describes an adjective, verb,
or another adverb. Adverbs express time, manner, place, frequency, or degree, e.g., then, slowly, there, sometimes, extremely. Sentence adverbs, or adverbial phrases (such as frankly, honestly, in my opinion) can be used to modify (comment on) whole sentences. | |
aimsWhat the teacher intends the students to learn in a lesson. | ||
alveolarA sound formed by putting the tip of the of the tongue against the alveolar ridge - at the front of the roof of the mouth, just behind the the top teeth. (t, d, s, z) | |
anaphoric referenceA word in a text (written or spoken) that refers back to an earlier idea in the text. E.g., I spoke to Charlie this morning. She sounded a bit unhappy. See also cataphoric reference. | |