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My Reason in Oining

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General Directions: Write your answer below the given passages. Afterwards, rename the file with your SURNAME_SECTION and submit the assignment in this section. There is a submission button on the right side of the screen. The deadline is on October 12, Monday.

P.S. A paraphrase also works like a précis. Both sentence construction and words used should be changed. The only difference between these two is the information included. In a précis, only the main ideas are included; on the other hand, a paraphrase includes everything – even the sub-ideas and details.

Exercise on Paraphrasing:

Directions: Read the following texts and provide a paraphrase for each given passage. Each item is worth 5 pts. The grading scheme for this activity is as follows: 5 pts (acceptable paraphrase with no revision), 4 pts (acceptable paraphrase with minor revisions), 2 pts (acceptable paraphrase with major revisions), and no point (unacceptable paraphrase due to plagiarism)

  1. Foreign linguists are not always trained linguists, whose ears were not attuned to the sounds of these languages, and who understandably were very much influenced by the orthography of their own languages.

Author: Consuelo J. Paz

Not all nonnative linguists are experienced linguists, understandably, most of them are greatly affected by their language’s orthography, and their ears are not coordinated with the sounds of these languages.

Author: Consuelo J. Paz

  1. In the 1960s, star worship fuels the popular cinema and feeds “the avarice of the independent producer.”

Author: Bliss Cua-Lim

Bliss Cua-Lim said that the greediness of the self-sufficient producer and the favorited cinema were fed and fueled both by star idolization in the 1960’s.

  1. The word ‘glamour’ was obscure before 1900. It meant a delusive charm, and was used in association with witchery and the occult. Sir Walter Scott is generally credited with having introduced the word into literary language in the early 1800s.

Author: Carol Dyhouse

According to Carol Dyhouse, The person who coined the word ‘glamour’ into literaturein the early 1800s was Sir Walter Scott. The word ‘glamour’ itself only became well known after 1900, and the word meant a delusive charm, with occult and witchery being the words glamour is linked with.

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