English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson...

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glish for Careers siness, Professional, and Technical Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458 CHAPTER 5 APPLES, TIGERS, AND SWAHILI ENGLISH FOR CAREERS, 9th Edition Business, Professional, and Technical by Leila R. Smith Presentation design by Barbara Moran

Transcript of English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson...

Page 1: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

English for CareersBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

CHAPTER 5 APPLES, TIGERS,

AND SWAHILI

ENGLISH FOR CAREERS, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and Technicalby Leila R. SmithPresentation design by Barbara Moran

Page 2: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Chapter 5 helps you...

• Apply Standard English principles to form plurals of regular and irregular nouns, write compound nouns, and capitalize proper nouns

• Correctly spell, pronounce, and use the words presented in this chapter

• Use bias-free language

Page 3: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

PLURAL OF NOUNS

ENDING WITH

• If preceded by a If preceded by a vowel--addvowel--add SS

• MonkeyMonkeysEnglish for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 4: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

If preceded by a consonant -- change

•DutyDuty•DutiesDuties

toiand add eses

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 5: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

If the noun is a musical term ending in an O, add S• PiccoloPiccolo• SopranoSoprano

ss

If the noun ends in O and is not a musical term, add S or es

VetoVetoeses MemoMemossEnglish for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 6: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

When in doubt, When in doubt, look it uplook it up

The dictionary is your friendEnglish for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 7: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

Some nouns ending in

• Loaf = LoaLoaf = Loavesves

• Scarf = ScarfScarf = Scarfss or or ScarScarvesves

Remember, if in doubt...

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 8: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Sometimes a spelling change is Sometimes a spelling change is required to form a pluralrequired to form a plural

• Louse - Louses or Lice,Louse - Louses or Lice, depends on meaning (louses depends on meaning (louses are creepy people; lice are creepy insects)are creepy people; lice are creepy insects)

• Crisis - CrisesCrisis - Crises

• Criterion - Criteria or CriterionsCriterion - Criteria or Criterions

• Ox - OxenOx - Oxen

• Man -- MenMan -- Men

• Tooth -- TeethTooth -- Teeth

• Foot -- FeetFoot -- Feet

Page 9: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Sometimes spelling remains the same for plurals

• Japanese• Vietnamese• Aircraft• Salmon• Sheep• Trout• Deer• Statistics

Page 10: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

Sometimes meaning determines the Sometimes meaning determines the use of a singular or plural verbuse of a singular or plural verb

Check the dictionaryCheck the dictionary for for ““use with sing. verb”use with sing. verb” or or ““pl. noun”pl. noun” oror ““pl.n.used as sing.”pl.n.used as sing.”

Phonetics Phonetics isis important to shorthand

The trousers trousers areare too long.English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 11: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Do not change the spelling of proper nouns to make them plural.

• Mary = MarysMary = Marys– We had threeWe had three MarysMarys in class.in class.

• Wolf = WolfsWolf = Wolfs– All theAll the WolfsWolfs came to the reunion.came to the reunion.

Page 12: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

to determine whether to space between, write as one word or hyphenate Close-up Eye-opener

Use (guess what...) the

Hand-me-downs Tie-in

Brother-in-law

Follow-up Name-dropperEnglish for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 13: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

• Back talkBack talk

• Time clockTime clock

• Tongue twisterTongue twister

• Short circuitShort circuit

(note: (note: space betweenspace between))

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English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

• DollhouseDollhouse• CheckbookCheckbook• DeadlockDeadlock• BlowoutBlowout• BookstoreBookstore

Note: Note: written as one wordwritten as one word

Page 15: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

Use the dictionary to Use the dictionary to determine which part of the determine which part of the compound to make plural.compound to make plural.

headline s write-off s

brother - in - lawsletter of credits

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 16: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

Here are some “capital ideas”…• Capitalize official titles (unless they follow name)

– President Jimmy Carter owned a peanut farm.– Jimmy Carter was president from 1977-1981.

• Capitalize titles that follow names in addresses– Jimmy Carter, President

• Don’t capitalize if a noun/pronoun precedes title– I wrote to my president about the war.

• Organizational words are usually capitalized only when associated with a specific entity– I go to college.– I go to Winston College.

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 17: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

• Capitalize definite geographic locations

– He lives in the North, but talks like a Southerner.

• Don’t capitalize general directions

– Go east on Eastern Avenue for five blocks.

• Always capitalize names of languages and official courses

– I learned Swahili in my African Language 101 class.

– Are you taking any language classes this fall?

• Races referenced by color are lowercase, but sociological references are capitalized. So are religions

– white/Caucasian black/African American

– Christianity Judaism Islam BuddhismEnglish for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 18: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

Avoid workplace language that unnecessarily focuses on someone’s age, physical characteristics, nationality, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, or political beliefs.

Be aware of acceptable terms for nationalities, races, and religions. Your textbook explains the best current choices.

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 19: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

• An African American networking specialist is the keynote speaker at the Computer Hardware Convention.

• A networking specialist is the keynote speaker at the Computer Hardware A networking specialist is the keynote speaker at the Computer Hardware ConventionConvention..

• African American networking specialist Marva Jones will be the keynote speaker at the African American Computer Scientists conference.

Which of these three sentences should be avoided in a bias-free workplace?

Page 20: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Jean Chung, the blind transcriber, doesn’t need the

new lighting fixture.

Because she is blind, transcriber Jean Chung doesn’t need the new lighting fixture.

Which of these two sentences should be avoided in a bias-free workplace?

Sue Clark is the new female CEO.

Sue Clark is the new CEO.

Page 21: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

AVOIDbusinessman mankind manmade

chairman male nurse stewardess

TRYexecutive humanity synthetic

moderator nurse flight attendant

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

Page 22: English for Careers Business, Professional, and Technical By Leila R. Smith ©2006 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ.

English for Careers, 9th EditionBusiness, Professional, and TechnicalBy Leila R. Smith

©2006 Pearson Education, Inc.Pearson Prentice HallUpper Saddle River, NJ 07458

You have seen how to

• Apply Standard English principles to form plurals of regular and irregular nouns, write compound nouns, and capitalize proper nouns

• Correctly spell, pronounce, and use the words presented in this chapter

• Use bias-free language