Advanced Writing with English in Use

(Frankie) #1

Styleandre gister


B Formal and informal 1.0 Vocabulary


One of the most impo rtantareas to master in termsof
register isthe differencebetween formal and informal
English.Of course,the reare many degrees of formality,
and most written English (including newspapers,
magazines andnovels)is situated somewherebetween
t he two extremes.


Here is a listof some of the most characterist ic features
that differentiate formal and informal English, followed by
somepreliminary exercises. Many furtherexercises to
practisethe useof differentregisters, and particularly to
distinguishbetweenformal and informal usage, occur
throughoutt he rest of thebook.


A Origin
Why aresome English wordsconsideredto be more
polit e or refined,w hereasotherswhich meanthe same
thingarethought rude or vulgar?
English vocabularycomprises wordstakenfrommany
languages ,particularlyAnglo-Saxon,FrenchandLatin. In
1066 the Anglo- Saxon inhabitantsof Britainwere
conquered by the French -speaking Normans. AsFrench
was thelanguage of the ruling classes (andLatin the
languageof education),wordsderivedfromFrenc h or
Latinhave been consideredmore formalt han those
derivedfromthe languageof theAnglo-Saxons.
The tablebelow compares relativelyformalwords of
Latin/ Frenchorigin withtheir lessformalalternatives
manyof Anglo-Saxon origin.It i s an illustrationof a '
generaltende ncy,not a conversiontable:the choice of
vocabularyalways dependson the context. Supply the
missingwords.

verbs NOll/ls
todepart togo car nivo re meat-eater
to retain putre faction
tocease deficiency
to fu nction vision
tom asti cate" residence
to dem onstrate respiration
to reside somnambulist
to seem comprehension
to shorten perspiration
to end
to help A(ljectit:es
to begin in correct w rong
towant umiuhlc
to get vacant
to free insane
tocat inexpe nsive
lis'e1y
Adcerbt als hetter
subsequent ly next / later childis h
principally e nough
so w hole
at first olde r
in the end

Fonnal

\VordsofLatin/ Fren ch
origin
Single-wordverbs


For malconnectingwords
Imp e rson al const ructions
itis sa i dth at
th epricehasbeeninc reased
olle neverknows


Abstr actnouns

Is happinesslJOssibleduring
1l1lcmp!oy", cllt?
Aftercl(//ificaliollojthe
proble m arcas...


N ote ndingwithpre position;
lise ofuilunu
To11:110111,,;erey OIlspeakillg?
Complexsentences
Useofinversio nfor
conditionalsandemphasis
Should'JOIlrequirefurther
iufonllatio l',niease
contac t...
No contraction sinwriting
I reill,Ice Icould

Infonnal
\Vo rdsofAng lo -Si.l'\on
origin
Phrasalverbs .idiom swith
get
Inf o r mal conne ctingwo rds
Active co nstru ctions
theysay that
thelJ'r;ep u!the pricelip
yOIlnev erknow
Mod ulverbs , adjectives ,
clauses, etc.
Can peoplehe happyuihcn
theyhucen'tgot ajoh?
\\'henthe hitsccenJ01lC!cas
getti ngIcn mgIwdbeen
explained.. "

Ending with p reposition

\ V//olvcrcyOIls]Jcakitigto?
Simple sentences
Inversionsome times used
fore mphasis
OlilythendidIrealize.

C ontractions in w riting
I ll, uie 'd

Fo n n al Informal Forma l Infnnnal

14 • Writingsub-s kills

° Bodilyfunctionsarea llarea whe rethedifferenceor formali tv is
particularlymarked..

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