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Exercises

I. Consider your answers to the following.

1. Which conditions stimulate the borrowing pro- cess?

2. Why are words borrowed?

3.What stages of assimilation do borrowings go through?

4. In what spheres of communication do internation- al words frequently occur?

5. What do we understand by etymological doublets?

  1. What are the characteristic features of transla­tion-loans?

  2. How are the etymological and stylistic character­istics of words interrelated?

II. Explain the etymology of the following words. Write them out in three columns: a) fully assimilated words; b) partially assimilated words; c) unassimilated words. Ex- plain the reasons for your choice in each case.

1 Also see Supplementary Material, p.p. 276.

Pen, hors d'oeuvre, ballet, beet, butter, skin, take, cup, police, distance, monk, garage, phenomenon, wine, large, justice, lesson, criterion, nice, coup d'etat, sequence, gay, port, river, loose, autumn, low, uncle, law, convenient, lunar, experiment, skirt, bish­op, regime, eau-de-Cologne.

III. Explain the etymology of the italicized words; identify the stage of assimilation.

1. Obviously, chere madame, the thief would take care to recover the money before he returned the dog.

  1. Heyward went to the kitchen for a glass of milk.

  2. It was a commercial coup d'etat which sent Suprana­tional (bank) shares soaring on the New York and Lodon markets. 4. Arriving in Paris always causes me pain, even when I have been away for only a short while. It is a city which I never fail to approach with expectation and leave with disappointment. 5. Dave raised his hand when he saw me with the dignified ges­ture of a patriarch greeting the appearance of an ex­pected sign. 6. Negotiations began but failed, not least because the students presented поп-negotiable de­mands. After two days the administration summoned state police, later unwisely supplemented by National Guard. An assault was launched upon the building. 7. Madge seemed slimmer and more piquant, even her movements were more gracious. 8. Leaving her desk, Edwina walked a few paces to one of the large plate-glass windows, part of the street frontage of the build­ing. What she saw amazed her. A long queue of people, four or five abreast, extended from the main front door past the entire length of the building. 9. He re­gretted their lost tete-a-tete. 10.1 lunched with Betty today, and she was telling me about a place they went to, on Lake Como. They had fresh peaches at every meal, and at night the fishermen go out in boats and sing under your windows. Doesn't it sound ro­mantic?

IV. State the origin of the following etymological doublets. Compare their meanings and explain why they are called "etymological doublets".

1. captain — chief tan, canal — channel, cart — chart.

  1. shirt — skirt, shriek — screech, shrew — screw.

  2. gaol — jail, corpse — corps, travel — travail.

  3. shadow — shade, off — of, dike — ditch.

V. In the following sentences find one of a pair of etymo- logical doublets and name the missing member of the pair.

1.1 led Mars (a dog) into the shadow of the building and looked around me. 2. "Unreliable", he said, "those fancy locks. Always getting jammed, aren't they?" 3. The children hung on to her skirts and asked to play with them. 4. Nurse Lawson had been sent to the hos­tel to clean aprons for all of us. 5. When the four o'clock race at Nottingham was won by Hal Adair, cool channels of sweat ran down my back and sides. 6. The lunch was late because Steven had had an extra big clinic at his London hospital. 7. He was attached to the ward which specialized in head injuries and was called 'Corelli'. 8. A story was sometimes told about a tear-down crew which, as a practical joke, worked in spare time to disassemble a car, belonging to one of their members. 9. Why, isn't he in jail? 10. Canvas sacks containing cash were being delivered from an ar­moured truck outside, the money accompanied by two armed guards.

VI. Classify the following borrowings according to the sphere of human activity they represent. What type of bor- rowings are these?

Television, progress, football, grapefruit, drama, Philosophy, rugby, sputnik, tragedy, coca-cola, biolo­gy, medicine, atom, primadonna, ballet, cricket, hock­ey, chocolate, communism, democracy.

VII. Read the following text. Copy out the international words. State to what sphere of human activity they belong.