What ages a woman: signs that make a woman older. A collection of ideal essays on social studies Lviv, a middle-aged woman, a prominent scientist

The text by S. Lvov touches on the problem of the impact of words on a person.

To help the reader understand the issues raised, the author turns to memories from his life. As a child, being an overweight boy, Lvov often faced ridicule from his classmates, and all this caused him great suffering: “I was teased, I suffered terribly.” The nickname given to him by one writer remained a reminder for a long time. After this, young Lvov even hated this writer, of course, even as an adult he forgave him, but still, because of that nickname, he suffered a lot from his peers.

S.L. Lvov expresses his point of view clearly and unambiguously. He believes that a rude and thoughtless word can greatly offend a person. It is especially important to remember this in relation to a child, since children are very sensitive to words.

I fully share the position of the publicist. Indeed, thoughtless use of words can cause irreparable harm to a person.

To confirm the author’s position and my opinion, I will give an example from fiction. In N. Nekrasov’s poem “You and I are stupid people...” the lyrical hero complains about “an unreasonable, harsh word,” which often becomes the reason for quarrels between lovers.

As a second argument I would like to give the following literary example. S. Dovlatov wrote: “This is an untranslatable word - “Rudeness.” The writer is sure that rudeness is nothing more than rudeness, impudence, impudence, taken together, but at the same time multiplied by impunity.

Thus, you need to watch your speech, because any thoughtless word can greatly offend a person. And as S Lvov showed, you need to show a special attitude towards children, because people at this age are very sensitive to words.

Original text.


CAUTION: WORD!

(1) Unfortunately, wounds are often caused by words.

(2)You dial a phone number. (3) They answer you:

(4)—I’m listening. (5) You say:

(6)—Please ask Alexey Petrovich.

(7) You made a mistake and ended up in another apartment. (8) What should a normal answer sound like in this case? (9) “You have the wrong number.” (10) This is how polite people answer. (11) Very polite: (12) “Unfortunately, you have the wrong number.” (13) But often you hear: (14) “There are no such people here!” (15) I’m tempted to ask: “Which ones are there?” (16) And a rude continuation in response: (17) “You have to watch when you type!” (18) It’s a trifle, of course, but it could very well ruin your mood.

(19) Wounds from words are caused not only by rudeness, but often by thoughtless handling of words. (20) Once in my life I myself suffered in a similar way.

(21) As a child, I was plump and remained so. (22) As adults, I can bear this easily, but when I was a schoolboy, I was teased and I suffered terribly. (23) It took a lot of endurance and the ability to stand up for oneself to stop teasing. (24) And so we, a group of schoolchildren, were invited to the editorial office of a large newspaper by a famous writer. (25) They gave us tea and treated us to cakes. (26) The writer talked to us about school. (27) I was preparing to write an essay. (28) I also answered his questions. (29) The essay appeared. (30) I unfolded the newspaper and felt cold: he, indicating my first name, last name and school, called me in the essay “tongued fat man Seryozha”! (31) Is there much joy in the fact that he praised my answers? (32) He made me famous all over the country as a big-tongued fat man! (33) It was said aptly, no matter how much I fought back, nothing helped, this new nickname stuck to me for a long time. (34) There was only one answer: (35) “That’s what they published in the newspaper!” (Z6) So, that’s how it is.”

(37) Many years have passed. (38) We met with this writer in a rest house. (39) We talked, and I asked him:

(40) - Do you know what grief you once caused me?

(41) He was terribly surprised.

(42) I told him this story. (43) He said:

(44)— I forgot. (45) Excuse me!

(46) An adult, I excused him, but as a boy I hated him. (47) Children are especially sensitive to words, especially vulnerable. (48) Parents, teachers, journalists writing about children, doctors, do not forget about this.

(49) Be careful with your words! (50) It can seriously hurt!

(51) But there are simple ways avoid this, even if we are forced to say unpleasant things to people.

(52) There are people for whom a sense of tact, including tact in choosing words, is given by nature or developed by upbringing.

(53) There are those to whom it is not given by nature and not brought up in them, but due to the nature of their work it is necessary. (54) Verbal tact should be taught to everyone who is associated with other people. (55) And for neglecting it - punish.

(56) “Don’t you see, or something!”; “How many times to repeat!”; “You don’t understand Russian!”; “What did they become” or “What did they sit down”; “What do you (and you) want!”; “Everyone has become so smart!”; “Scientists have become sick!”; “Well, well, nothing”; “Look, how tender”; “And so it will be good”; “I’ll tell you twenty times!” (57) But you can say: (58) “Good morning!”; "Good afternoon!"; "Good evening!"; "Please come in"; “Please sit down”; “Please, please pass it on”; “I will pass after you”; "Thanks a lot"; "Thank you"; "All the best!"; "Tell me please..."

(59) For thousands of years, humanity has developed ways of expressing benevolence, gratitude, apology, sympathy, and attention. (60) They entered folk traditions, acquired a deep ethical and social meaning.

(61) It happens that external politeness masks internal indifference or even ill will. (62) But this is an exception, and it does not give grounds to curse politeness.

(63) In everyday life, in some books, sometimes on stage and on screen, the idea is asserted that politeness, good manners, restraint, courtesy are a cover for negative personality traits. (64) On the contrary, rudeness, shamelessness, impudence are an expression of a strong, extraordinary, sincere personality, a manifestation of talent that has the right to such an expression of its originality.

(65) It also happens that rudeness is spoken of as the protective armor of a tender, vulnerable soul. (66) In fact, as we know from personal experience communication with rude people, behind rudeness and rudeness, as a rule, nothing is hidden except rudeness and rudeness!

(67) Education is not limited to instilling politeness, restraint, friendliness, and courtesy. (68) But you can’t do without them. (69) These qualities are elementary, but beautiful. (70) There is no need to fear their excess. (71) There is no doubt that a person must be able to stand up for himself. (72) But no one will ever prove that the surest way to stand up for yourself is to respond to rudeness with rudeness, to evil with evil, to meanness with meanness.

(73) Shouting and cursing are not evidence of strength or proof. (74) Strength is in calm dignity. (75) It’s not easy to force yourself to be respected and not allow yourself to be rude. (76) But stooping to the level of a boor is pointless. (77) This means giving up oneself. (78) From my own personality. (79) Politeness, as a rule, is synonymous with inner strength and true dignity. (80) Ask: “Why politeness?” It’s just as pointless as asking questions: “Why culture?”, “Why beauty?”

(According to S. Lvov *)


* Lvov Sergei Lvovich (1922-1981) - prose writer, critic, publicist, author of numerous articles on Soviet and foreign literature, works of biographical and children's literature.

Option No. 4840905

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Version for printing and copying in MS Word

Indicate the numbers of sentences that correctly convey the MAIN information contained in the text. Write down the numbers of these sentences.

1) When in 334 BC Alexander the Great offered his help in restoring the temple of Artemis in Ephesus, the inhabitants of the city refused the great ruler, because they believed that it was not appropriate for a god, which they considered Alexander to be, to erect a temple to the goddess Artemis.

2) Alexander the Great, having offered help in restoring the temple of Artemis, burned by Herostratus, put the inhabitants of Ephesus in a difficult position, because for the Ephesians, the great king was a barbarian, and a barbarian could not participate in the restoration of the temple of the goddess.

3) The Ephesians, who did not want to accept help from Alexander the Great in restoring the temple of Artemis, but at the same time were afraid to refuse him, managed, with the help of flattery and cunning, to convince the commander not to provide assistance.

4) In 334 BC, Alexander the Great, leading a campaign against the Persians, ran through Asia Minor, offered the residents of Ephesus his help in restoring the Temple of Artemis.

5) The Ephesians had to use cunning and flattery to convince Alexander the Great not to assist in the restoration of the Temple of Artemis, since they were afraid to refuse help.


<...>

Answer:

Which of the following words (combinations of words) should be in the blank in the third sentence?

Besides,

Hence,

And still

In other words

Unfortunately


(1) In 334 BC, Alexander the Great, during his victorious campaign against the Persians, which ran through Asia Minor, approached Ephesus, founded by the Greeks at the end of the second millennium BC, and, visiting the temple of Artemis, which was then being restored after a fire , arranged by Herostratus, firmly decided to help with its construction with money. (2) With his proposal, Alexander puzzled the inhabitants of the city: on the one hand, the Ephesians were afraid to offend the powerful king of Macedonia with a refusal, on the other hand, Alexander, like any person for whom Greek was not his native language, was a barbarian for them and should not have participated in the restoration of the temple to the Greek goddess. (3)<...>the inhabitants of Ephesus managed to find a way out of their difficult situation: they told the foreign king that a powerful ruler is like a god, but it is not proper for a god to erect a temple to a goddess, and, flattered by such words, Alexander left Ephesus, no longer insisting on his help.

Answer:

Read a fragment of a dictionary entry that gives the meaning of the word NATIVE. Determine the meaning in which this word is used in the second (2) sentence of the text. Write down the number corresponding to this meaning in the given fragment of the dictionary entry.

NATIVE, oh, oh.

1. Consisting of a direct (blood) relationship, as well as general kinship. Native sister. R. uncle. Visit relatives(noun).

2. One’s own by birth, by spirit, by habits. R. edge. Home country. R. tongue(the language of their homeland, spoken since childhood).

3. Dear, dear (in circulation).


(1) In 334 BC, Alexander the Great, during his victorious campaign against the Persians, which ran through Asia Minor, approached Ephesus, founded by the Greeks at the end of the second millennium BC, and, visiting the temple of Artemis, which was then being restored after a fire , arranged by Herostratus, firmly decided to help with its construction with money. (2) With his proposal, Alexander puzzled the inhabitants of the city: on the one hand, the Ephesians were afraid to offend the powerful king of Macedonia with a refusal, on the other hand, Alexander, like any person for whom Greek was not his native language, was a barbarian for them and should not have participated in the restoration of the temple to the Greek goddess. (3)<...>the inhabitants of Ephesus managed to find a way out of their difficult situation: they told the foreign king that a powerful ruler is like a god, but it is not proper for a god to erect a temple to a goddess, and, flattered by such words, Alexander left Ephesus, no longer insisting on his help.

Answer:

In one of the words below, an error was made in the placement of stress: the letter denoting the stressed vowel sound was highlighted incorrectly. Write this word down.

jealous (predicate)

document

Answer:

One of the sentences below uses the highlighted word incorrectly. Correct the lexical error by choosing a paronym for the highlighted word. Write down the chosen word.

To obtain a visa, a participant in a business or tourist trip to the United States must SUBMIT a package of relevant documents.

Calcium deficiency in the body will be helped, first of all, by products such as milk, cottage cheese, and cheese.

Participation in team games and other interesting sporting events gives us a VIVIDizing boost of energy.

When rolling out the dough, you must periodically shake off excess flour from the rolling pin.

Answer:

In one of the words highlighted below, an error was made in the formation of the word form. Correct the mistake and write the word correctly.

in the year eight hundred and twenty

factory PRESSES

the picture is more BEAUTIFUL

CUT HAIR

our PASSPORTS

14.05 Assignment changed

Answer:

Establish a correspondence between grammatical errors and the sentences in which they were made: for each position in the first column, select the corresponding position from the second column.

GRAMMATICAL ERRORS OFFERS

A) violation in the construction of sentences with participial phrases

B) incorrect use of the case form of a noun with a preposition

C) an error in the construction of a sentence with an adverbial phrase

D) violation in the construction of a sentence with an inconsistent application

D) error in construction complex sentence

1) We address our problem to Irina Ivanovna, which cannot but worry us all.

2) One of the Russian prose writers of the early 20th century who described in detail the life of the Russian people was Ivan Shmelev.

3) You can read about the life and work of the artist, about his ruined talent in the story “Orest Kiprensky” by K. Paustovsky

4) V.G. Belinsky wrote about 20 articles and reviews specifically dedicated to the work of N.V. Gogol.

5) Those who passionately love their native culture appear before us D.S. Likhachev in the book “Letters about the good and the beautiful”.

6) Those who sat on the bank of the river more than once experienced incomparable bliss.

7) Registration was carried out immediately upon the arrival of the symposium participants at the airport.

8) Having received his primary education at home, Grinev was sent to serve in the Belogorsk fortress.

9) A visitor, apparently a tourist, asked a passerby if there was a post office nearby.

Write down the numbers in your answer, arranging them in the order corresponding to the letters:

ABINGD

Answer:

Identify the word in which the unstressed alternating vowel of the root is missing. Write out this word by inserting the missing letter.

k..varny

you'll overdo it

traced

rotation

Answer:

Identify the row in which the same letter is missing in both words. Write down these words by inserting the missing letter.

and..count, without..compromise;

o..throw, on..write;

pr..funny, touching;

monkey, inter..linguistic;

super..exquisite, pre..history.

Answer:

finish

get stuck

savvy..stylish

shy

pencil..k

Answer:

Write down the word in which the letter E is written in the blank.

spinning... spinning

pin..sew

take a look..look at it

drank..sh

checked

Answer:

Determine the sentence in which NOT is spelled together with the word. Open the brackets and write down this word.

Getting a meeting with the ambassador was not at all easy.

On the wall hung a Persian carpet with a not at all flashy ornament.

They wished Alexander that every new day of his life would be (dis)similar to the previous ones.

Masha played a very beautiful melody on the piano by a composer (un)known to me.

The table was (not) cleared.

Answer:

Determine the sentence in which both highlighted words are written CONTINUOUSLY. Open the brackets and write down these two words.

(OVER) many years he worked tirelessly, (FOR) THEN now he could rest as much as his heart desired.

Nina, just like me, sighed and lowered her eyes to the ground TO hide her tears.

(B)AFTERWARDS, we remembered with a smile the difficulties we faced (B)AT THE BEGINNING of the year.

I didn’t want to waste time (IN) EMPTY, so I immediately started talking about business as soon as we were left (IN) TWO.

She was hurt (FROM) THAT she did not find understanding (FROM) THAT person whom she loved very much.

Answer:

Indicate all the numbers replaced by one letter N.

This picture, given (1) to her father several years ago by a smart (2) but spoiled (3) tribe (4), was inserted (5) into a simple frame.

Answer:

Place punctuation marks. List two sentences that require ONE comma. Write down the numbers of these sentences.

1) I loved to wander for a long time through the streets or in the park or along the seashore.

2) The dry and clean air smells of wormwood and compressed rye buckwheat and field cloves.

3) The saving light of the lighthouse then appeared, disappeared in the fog, then was seen again in the distance.

4) The grandmother read a fairy tale to the little ones and secretly examined the new guest.

5) The torn boots were sent to a workshop and they were repaired there.

Answer:

The space opposite (1) the window (2) located between the porch and the blank wall was fenced off with high boards (3) allowing one to see (4) only a small patch of sky.

Answer:

Add all missing punctuation marks: indicate the number(s) in whose place(s) there should be a comma(s) in the sentence.

Vlad (1) finally (2) reached the river bank, sat down on the grass and began to look into the distance, trying (3) obviously (4) to see something on the opposite bank.

Answer:

Place all punctuation marks: indicate the number(s) in whose place(s) there should be a comma(s) in the sentence.

Last night (1) I said goodbye to my companion (2) whose kindness (3) (4) I will never forget.

Answer:

Place all punctuation marks: indicate the number(s) in whose place(s) there should be a comma(s) in the sentence.

Many people mistakenly think (1) that (2) if a person knows how to swim at least a little (3) then he has nothing to be afraid of (4) and he doesn’t care about any depths.

Answer:

Which of the statements correspond to the content of the text? Please provide answer numbers.

1) Wounds are not only physical, but also mental, often arising from

that a person uses his words thoughtlessly.

2) When talking with a person, you need to use words thoughtfully, use long-developed and generally accepted formulas of politeness.

3) You can’t do without rudeness modern society, because shouting and swearing are evidence of strength and persuasiveness.

4) A real person who respects himself and those around him will never stoop to the level of a boor, trying to preserve his own personality.

5) A polite person is usually internally strong.


(10) The clock showed two.

Get out of here!

(According to S. Lvov*)

Answer:

Which of the following statements are true? Please provide answer numbers.

Enter the numbers in ascending order.

1) Sentences 2-4 present the narrative.

2) Proposition 19 contains a conclusion from the content of sentences 1-18.

3) Sentences 32-33 present the narrative.

4) Propositions 50-57 contain reasoning.

5) Sentences 45-47 provide a description.


(1) An elderly woman, a prominent scientist, told the following story: (2) “I was crossing the square, some drunk pushed me, I fell to my knees, injured them, and blood flowed from the wounds down my legs in a stream. (3) I went to the nearest clinic and said to my sister: “Please give me first aid.” (4) She politely directed me to the surgical room. (5) A majestic lady was sitting at the table in the office. (6) Surgeon and chief physician of the clinic. (7) I said:

I'm bleeding. (8) Please give me first aid.

(10) The clock showed two.

- (11) But I’m bleeding, help me!

(12) And then she didn’t shout. (13) She calmly said:

Get out of here!

(14) Of course, I went out. (15) I cried."

(19) A man came to a doctor to heal a physical wound, but the doctor inflicted a spiritual wound on him.

(20) And I thought how, alas, wounds are often inflicted by words.

(21) Wounds from words are caused not only by rudeness, but also by thoughtless handling of words.

(22) Such an incident occurred in one family. (23) A daughter, a fifth grade student, who had recently suffered a serious long-term illness, returned home one day pale. (24) Said:

I won't go to this school again.

(25) She didn’t explain anything. (26) All that was visible was that she was immensely shocked.

- (27) It’s better to die than to go to this school.

(28) The parents decided to transfer the girl to a neighboring school. (29) And only years later she told what the matter was. (Zone medical examination In the presence of her friends, the school doctor exclaimed sympathetically:

You can't live with such a heart!

(31) That's what she said. (32) Her friends bombarded the girl with questions. (33) She dressed silently and silently left the school. (34) I left, never to return there again. (35) She didn’t say anything to anyone, so as not to upset anyone close to her. (Zb) She believed her elders and thought that she was living in her last weeks.

(37) This wound was inflicted with a word not by anger, not by rudeness, but by stupidity and ignorance.

(38) When many such examples from my own experience and the experience of others and reflections on them had accumulated, I spoke on the radio with a conversation on the topic “Caution - the word!” (39) He didn’t offer anything special or extraordinary, he simply advised using words thoughtfully. (40) Apply, for example, long-developed and generally accepted formulas of politeness and abandon such expressions as: “Don’t you see what?!”, “Blind?”, “Deaf?”, especially since there is a danger of actually hitting a person, who sees or hears poorly. (41) I recalled other words, friendly, polite, benevolent. (42) And he ended the program like this: “Be careful with your words; rudeness is double-edged and often avenges itself!

(43) An avalanche of responses fell upon me. (44) The majority of those who responded to my speech agreed: words must be handled carefully.

(45) However, there were people who were irritated by the very formulation of this problem. (46) They say: you can’t do without rudeness and you don’t need to do without it! (47) By rudeness they also understand its extreme form - obscene language. (48) Without her, there’s no point in going to a construction site, in a workshop, in a field. (49) And in home life it is unthinkable without a strong word.

(50) Shouting and cursing are not evidence of strength or proof. (51) Strength lies in calm dignity. (52) It’s not easy to force yourself to respect and not allow yourself to be rude. (53) But stooping to the level of a boor is pointless. (54) This means giving up oneself! (55) From my own personality! (56) Politeness, as a rule, is synonymous with inner strength and true dignity. (57) Asking why politeness is as pointless as asking the questions: “Why culture?” “Why beauty?”

(According to S. Lvov*)

* Sergei Lvovich Lvov (1922-1981) - prose writer, critic, publicist, author of articles on Soviet and foreign literature, works of biographical and children's literature


Answer:

Identify the word used in the text in a figurative sense. Write this word down.

iron (sentence 9)

pale (sentence 23)

school (sentence 30)

home (sentence 49)

questions (sentence 57)


(1) An elderly woman, a prominent scientist, told the following story: (2) “I was crossing the square, some drunk pushed me, I fell to my knees, injured them, and blood flowed from the wounds down my legs in a stream. (3) I went to the nearest clinic and said to my sister: “Please give me first aid.” (4) She politely directed me to the surgical room. (5) A majestic lady was sitting at the table in the office. (6) Surgeon and chief physician of the clinic. (7) I said:

I'm bleeding. (8) Please give me first aid.

(10) The clock showed two.

- (11) But I’m bleeding, help me!

(12) And then she didn’t shout. (13) She calmly said:

Get out of here!

(14) Of course, I went out. (15) I cried."

(19) A man came to a doctor to heal a physical wound, but the doctor inflicted a spiritual wound on him.

(20) And I thought how, alas, wounds are often inflicted by words.

(21) Wounds from words are caused not only by rudeness, but also by thoughtless handling of words.

(22) Such an incident occurred in one family. (23) A daughter, a fifth grade student, who had recently suffered a serious long-term illness, returned home one day pale. (24) Said:

I won't go to this school again.

(25) She didn’t explain anything. (26) All that was visible was that she was immensely shocked.

- (27) It’s better to die than to go to this school.

(28) The parents decided to transfer the girl to a neighboring school. (29) And only years later she told what the matter was. (ZO) During a medical examination in the presence of her friends, the school doctor exclaimed sympathetically:

You can't live with such a heart!

(31) That's what she said. (32) Her friends bombarded the girl with questions. (33) She dressed silently and silently left the school. (34) I left, never to return there again. (35) She didn’t say anything to anyone, so as not to upset anyone close to her. (Zb) She believed her elders and thought that she was living in her last weeks.

(37) This wound was inflicted with a word not by anger, not by rudeness, but by stupidity and ignorance.

(38) When many such examples from my own experience and the experience of others and reflections on them had accumulated, I spoke on the radio with a conversation on the topic “Caution - the word!” (39) He didn’t offer anything special or extraordinary, he simply advised using words thoughtfully. (40) Apply, for example, long-developed and generally accepted formulas of politeness and abandon such expressions as: “Don’t you see what?!”, “Blind?”, “Deaf?”, especially since there is a danger of actually hitting a person, who sees or hears poorly. (41) I recalled other words, friendly, polite, benevolent. (42) And he ended the program like this: “Be careful with your words; rudeness is double-edged and often avenges itself!

(43) An avalanche of responses fell upon me. (44) The majority of those who responded to my speech agreed: words must be handled carefully.

(45) However, there were people who were irritated by the very formulation of this problem. (46) They say: you can’t do without rudeness and you don’t need to do without it! (47) By rudeness they also understand its extreme form - obscene language. (48) Without her, there’s no point in going to a construction site, in a workshop, in a field. (49) And in home life it is unthinkable without a strong word.

(50) Shouting and cursing are not evidence of strength or proof. (51) Strength lies in calm dignity. (52) It’s not easy to force yourself to respect and not allow yourself to be rude. (53) But stooping to the level of a boor is pointless. (54) This means giving up oneself! (55) From my own personality! (56) Politeness, as a rule, is synonymous with inner strength and true dignity. (57) Asking why politeness is as pointless as asking the questions: “Why culture?” “Why beauty?”

(According to S. Lvov*)

* Sergei Lvovich Lvov (1922-1981) - prose writer, critic, publicist, author of articles on Soviet and foreign literature, works of biographical and children's literature

Answer:

Among sentences 10-17, find one(s) that is related to the previous one using a conjunction, a demonstrative pronoun, and word forms. Write the number(s) of this sentence(s).


(1) An elderly woman, a prominent scientist, told the following story: (2) “I was crossing the square, some drunk pushed me, I fell to my knees, injured them, and blood flowed from the wounds down my legs in a stream. (3) I went to the nearest clinic and said to my sister: “Please give me first aid.” (4) She politely directed me to the surgical room. (5) A majestic lady was sitting at the table in the office. (6) Surgeon and chief physician of the clinic. (7) I said:

I'm bleeding. (8) Please give me first aid.

(10) The clock showed two.

- (11) But I’m bleeding, help me!

(12) And then she didn’t shout. (13) She calmly said:

Get out of here!

(14) Of course, I went out. (15) I cried."

(19) A man came to a doctor to heal a physical wound, but the doctor inflicted a spiritual wound on him.

(20) And I thought how, alas, wounds are often inflicted by words.

(21) Wounds from words are caused not only by rudeness, but also by thoughtless handling of words.

(22) Such an incident occurred in one family. (23) A daughter, a fifth grade student, who had recently suffered a serious long-term illness, returned home one day pale. (24) Said:

I won't go to this school again.

(25) She didn’t explain anything. (26) All that was visible was that she was immensely shocked.

- (27) It’s better to die than to go to this school.

(28) The parents decided to transfer the girl to a neighboring school. (29) And only years later she told what the matter was. (ZO) During a medical examination in the presence of her friends, the school doctor exclaimed sympathetically:

You can't live with such a heart!

(31) That's what she said. (32) Her friends bombarded the girl with questions. (33) She dressed silently and silently left the school. (34) I left, never to return there again. (35) She didn’t say anything to anyone, so as not to upset anyone close to her. (Zb) She believed her elders and thought that she was living in her last weeks.

(37) This wound was inflicted with a word not by anger, not by rudeness, but by stupidity and ignorance.

(38) When many such examples from my own experience and the experience of others and reflections on them had accumulated, I spoke on the radio with a conversation on the topic “Caution - the word!” (39) He didn’t offer anything special or extraordinary, he simply advised using words thoughtfully. (40) Apply, for example, long-developed and generally accepted formulas of politeness and abandon such expressions as: “Don’t you see what?!”, “Blind?”, “Deaf?”, especially since there is a danger of actually hitting a person, who sees or hears poorly. (41) I recalled other words, friendly, polite, benevolent. (42) And he ended the program like this: “Be careful with your words; rudeness is double-edged and often avenges itself!

(43) An avalanche of responses fell upon me. (44) The majority of those who responded to my speech agreed: words must be handled carefully.

(45) However, there were people who were irritated by the very formulation of this problem. (46) They say: you can’t do without rudeness and you don’t need to do without it! (47) By rudeness they also understand its extreme form - obscene language. (48) Without her, there’s no point in going to a construction site, in a workshop, in a field. (49) And in home life it is unthinkable without a strong word.

(50) Shouting and cursing are not evidence of strength or proof. (51) Strength lies in calm dignity. (52) It’s not easy to force yourself to respect and not allow yourself to be rude. (53) But stooping to the level of a boor is pointless. (54) This means giving up oneself! (55) From my own personality! (56) Politeness, as a rule, is synonymous with inner strength and true dignity. (57) Asking why politeness is as pointless as asking the questions: “Why culture?” “Why beauty?”

1) question-and-answer form of presentation

2) metaphor

3) homogeneous members

4) professional vocabulary

6) lexical repetition

7) parcellation

9) contextual antonyms


(1) An elderly woman, a prominent scientist, told the following story: (2) “I was crossing the square, some drunk pushed me, I fell to my knees, injured them, and blood flowed from the wounds down my legs in a stream. (3) I went to the nearest clinic and said to my sister: “Please give me first aid.” (4) She politely directed me to the surgical room. (5) A majestic lady was sitting at the table in the office. (6) Surgeon and chief physician of the clinic. (7) I said:

I'm bleeding. (8) Please give me first aid.

(10) The clock showed two.

- (11) But I’m bleeding, help me!

(12) And then she didn’t shout. (13) She calmly said:

Get out of here!

(14) Of course, I went out. (15) I cried."

(19) A man came to a doctor to heal a physical wound, but the doctor inflicted a spiritual wound on him.

(20) And I thought how, alas, wounds are often inflicted by words.

(21) Wounds from words are caused not only by rudeness, but also by thoughtless handling of words.

(22) Such an incident occurred in one family. (23) A daughter, a fifth grade student, who had recently suffered a serious long-term illness, returned home one day pale. (24) Said:

I won't go to this school again.

(25) She didn’t explain anything. (26) All that was visible was that she was immensely shocked.

- (27) It’s better to die than to go to this school.

(28) The parents decided to transfer the girl to a neighboring school. (29) And only years later she told what the matter was. (ZO) During a medical examination in the presence of her friends, the school doctor exclaimed sympathetically:

You can't live with such a heart!

(31) That's what she said. (32) Her friends bombarded the girl with questions. (33) She dressed silently and silently left the school. (34) I left, never to return there again. (35) She didn’t say anything to anyone, so as not to upset anyone close to her. (Zb) She believed her elders and thought that she was living in her last weeks.

(37) This wound was inflicted with a word not by anger, not by rudeness, but by stupidity and ignorance.

(38) When many such examples from my own experience and the experience of others and reflections on them had accumulated, I spoke on the radio with a conversation on the topic “Caution - the word!” (39) He didn’t offer anything special or extraordinary, he simply advised using words thoughtfully. (40) Apply, for example, long-developed and generally accepted formulas of politeness and abandon such expressions as: “Don’t you see what?!”, “Blind?”, “Deaf?”, especially since there is a danger of actually hitting a person, who sees or hears poorly. (41) I recalled other words, friendly, polite, benevolent. (42) And he ended the program like this: “Be careful with your words; rudeness is double-edged and often avenges itself!

(43) An avalanche of responses fell upon me. (44) The majority of those who responded to my speech agreed: words must be handled carefully.

(45) However, there were people who were irritated by the very formulation of this problem. (46) They say: you can’t do without rudeness and you don’t need to do without it! (47) By rudeness they also understand its extreme form - obscene language. (48) Without her, there’s no point in going to a construction site, in a workshop, in a field. (49) And in home life it is unthinkable without a strong word.

(50) Shouting and cursing are not evidence of strength or proof. (51) Strength lies in calm dignity. (52) It’s not easy to force yourself to respect and not allow yourself to be rude. (53) But stooping to the level of a boor is pointless. (54) This means giving up oneself! (55) From my own personality! (56) Politeness, as a rule, is synonymous with inner strength and true dignity. (57) Asking why politeness is as pointless as asking the questions: “Why culture?” “Why beauty?”

The volume of the essay is at least 150 words.

Work written without reference to the text read (not based on this text) is not graded. If the essay is a retelling or a complete rewrite of the original text without any comments, then such work is graded 0 points.

Write an essay carefully, legible handwriting.


(1) An elderly woman, a prominent scientist, told the following story: (2) “I was crossing the square, some drunk pushed me, I fell to my knees, injured them, and blood flowed from the wounds down my legs in a stream. (3) I went to the nearest clinic and said to my sister: “Please give me first aid.” (4) She politely directed me to the surgical room. (5) A majestic lady was sitting at the table in the office. (6) Surgeon and chief physician of the clinic. (7) I said:

I'm bleeding. (8) Please give me first aid.

(10) The clock showed two.

- (11) But I’m bleeding, help me!

(12) And then she didn’t shout. (13) She calmly said:

Get out of here!

(14) Of course, I went out. (15) I cried."

(19) A man came to a doctor to heal a physical wound, but the doctor inflicted a spiritual wound on him.

(20) And I thought how, alas, wounds are often inflicted by words.

(21) Wounds from words are caused not only by rudeness, but also by thoughtless handling of words.

(22) Such an incident occurred in one family. (23) A daughter, a fifth grade student, who had recently suffered a serious long-term illness, returned home one day pale. (24) Said:

I won't go to this school again.

(25) She didn’t explain anything. (26) All that was visible was that she was immensely shocked.

- (27) It’s better to die than to go to this school.

(28) The parents decided to transfer the girl to a neighboring school. (29) And only years later she told what the matter was. (ZO) During a medical examination in the presence of her friends, the school doctor exclaimed sympathetically:

You can't live with such a heart!

(31) That's what she said. (32) Her friends bombarded the girl with questions. (33) She dressed silently and silently left the school. (34) I left, never to return there again. (35) She didn’t say anything to anyone, so as not to upset anyone close to her. (Zb) She believed her elders and thought that she was living in her last weeks.

(37) This wound was inflicted with a word not by anger, not by rudeness, but by stupidity and ignorance.

(38) When many such examples from my own experience and the experience of others and reflections on them had accumulated, I spoke on the radio with a conversation on the topic “Caution - the word!” (39) He didn’t offer anything special or extraordinary, he simply advised using words thoughtfully. (40) Apply, for example, long-developed and generally accepted formulas of politeness and abandon such expressions as: “Don’t you see what?!”, “Blind?”, “Deaf?”, especially since there is a danger of actually hitting a person, who sees or hears poorly. (41) I recalled other words, friendly, polite, benevolent. (42) And he ended the program like this: “Be careful with your words; rudeness is double-edged and often avenges itself!

(43) An avalanche of responses fell upon me. (44) The majority of those who responded to my speech agreed: words must be handled carefully.

(45) However, there were people who were irritated by the very formulation of this problem. (46) They say: you can’t do without rudeness and you don’t need to do without it! (47) By rudeness they also understand its extreme form - obscene language. (48) Without her, there’s no point in going to a construction site, in a workshop, in a field. (49) And in home life it is unthinkable without a strong word.

(50) Shouting and cursing are not evidence of strength or proof. (51) Strength lies in calm dignity. (52) It’s not easy to force yourself to respect and not allow yourself to be rude. (53) But stooping to the level of a boor is pointless. (54) This means giving up oneself! (55) From my own personality! (56) Politeness, as a rule, is synonymous with inner strength and true dignity. (57) Asking why politeness is as pointless as asking the questions: “Why culture?” “Why beauty?”

Which of the following statements are true? Please provide answer numbers.

5) Sentences 45-47 provide a description.


(1) An elderly woman, a prominent scientist, told the following story: (2) “I was crossing the square, some drunk pushed me, I fell to my knees, injured them, and blood flowed from the wounds down my legs in a stream. (3) I went to the nearest clinic and said to my sister: “Please give me first aid.” (4) She politely directed me to the surgical room. (5) A majestic lady was sitting at the table in the office. (6) Surgeon and chief physician of the clinic. (7) I said:

I'm bleeding. (8) Please give me first aid.

(10) The clock showed two.

- (11) But I’m bleeding, help me!

(12) And then she didn’t shout. (13) She calmly said:

Get out of here!

(14) Of course, I went out. (15) I cried."

(19) A man came to a doctor to heal a physical wound, but the doctor inflicted a spiritual wound on him.

(20) And I thought how, alas, wounds are often inflicted by words.

(21) Wounds from words are caused not only by rudeness, but also by thoughtless handling of words.

(22) Such an incident occurred in one family. (23) A daughter, a fifth grade student, who had recently suffered a serious long-term illness, returned home one day pale. (24) Said:

I won't go to this school again.

(25) She didn’t explain anything. (26) All that was visible was that she was immensely shocked.

- (27) It’s better to die than to go to this school.

(28) The parents decided to transfer the girl to a neighboring school. (29) And only years later she told what the matter was. (ZO) During a medical examination in the presence of her friends, the school doctor exclaimed sympathetically:

You can't live with such a heart!

(31) That's what she said. (32) Her friends bombarded the girl with questions. (33) She dressed silently and silently left the school. (34) I left, never to return there again. (35) She didn’t say anything to anyone, so as not to upset anyone close to her. (Zb) She believed her elders and thought that she was living in her last weeks.

(37) This wound was inflicted with a word not by anger, not by rudeness, but by stupidity and ignorance.

(38) When many such examples from my own experience and the experience of others and reflections on them had accumulated, I spoke on the radio with a conversation on the topic “Caution - the word!” (39) He didn’t offer anything special or extraordinary, he simply advised using words thoughtfully. (40) Apply, for example, long-developed and generally accepted formulas of politeness and abandon such expressions as: “Don’t you see what?!”, “Blind?”, “Deaf?”, especially since there is a danger of actually hitting a person, who sees or hears poorly. (41) I recalled other words, friendly, polite, benevolent. (42) And he ended the program like this: “Be careful with your words; rudeness is double-edged and often avenges itself!

(43) An avalanche of responses fell upon me. (44) The majority of those who responded to my speech agreed: words must be handled carefully.

(45) However, there were people who were irritated by the very formulation of this problem. (46) They say: you can’t do without rudeness and you don’t need to do without it! (47) By rudeness they also understand its extreme form - obscene language. (48) Without her, there’s no point in going to a construction site, in a workshop, in a field. (49) And in home life it is unthinkable without a strong word.

(50) Shouting and cursing are not evidence of strength or proof. (51) Strength lies in calm dignity. (52) It’s not easy to force yourself to respect and not allow yourself to be rude. (53) But stooping to the level of a boor is pointless. (54) This means giving up oneself! (55) From my own personality! (56) Politeness, as a rule, is synonymous with inner strength and true dignity. (57) Asking why politeness is as pointless as asking the questions: “Why culture?” “Why beauty?”

(According to S. Lvov*)

* Sergei Lvovich Lvov (1922-1981) - prose writer, critic, publicist, author of articles on Soviet and foreign literature, works of biographical and children's literature

Which of the statements correspond to the content of the text? Please provide answer numbers.

Enter the numbers in ascending order.

1) Wounds are not only physical, but also mental, often arising from

that a person uses his words thoughtlessly.

2) When talking with a person, you need to use words thoughtfully, use long-developed and generally accepted formulas of politeness.

3) Rudeness cannot be avoided in modern society, because shouting and swearing are evidence of strength and persuasiveness.

4) A real person who respects himself and those around him will never stoop to the level of a boor, trying to preserve his own personality.

5) A polite person is usually internally strong.

Explanation.

The condition has been changed by the editors of I DECIDE.

Answer number 1 is confirmed by proposals No. 20-21.

Answer number 2 - sentences No. 39-42. Answer number 4 - proposals No. 53-54.

Answer number 3 does not correspond to the content of the text.

Answer 5 - sentence 56.

Answer: 1245.

Answer: 1245

Relevance: Current academic year

Identify the word used in the text in a figurative sense. Write this word down.

iron (sentence 9)

pale (sentence 23)

school (sentence 30)

home (sentence 49)

questions (sentence 57)

Explanation.

Answer: iron.

Answer: iron

Among sentences 10-17, find one(s) that is related to the previous one using a conjunction, a demonstrative pronoun, and word forms. Write the number(s) of this sentence(s).

Sentence 17 is connected with the previous one using the conjunction BUT, the demonstrative pronoun SUCH and forms of the word UDAR - UDAROM.

Answer: 17.

Answer: 17

Rule: Task 25. Means of communication of sentences in the text

MEANS OF CONNECTING SENTENCES IN THE TEXT

Several sentences connected into a whole by theme and main idea are called text (from the Latin textum - fabric, connection, connection).

Obviously, all sentences separated by a period are not isolated from each other. There is a semantic connection between two adjacent sentences of a text, and not only sentences located next to each other can be related, but also those separated from each other by one or more sentences. The semantic relations between sentences are different: the content of one sentence can be contrasted with the content of another; the contents of two or more sentences can be compared with one another; the content of the second sentence may reveal the meaning of the first or clarify one of its members, and the content of the third - the meaning of the second, etc. The purpose of task 23 is to determine the type of connection between sentences.

The task could be worded like this:

Among sentences 11-18, find one(s) that is related to the previous one using a demonstrative pronoun, adverb and cognates. Write the number(s) of the offer(s)

Or: Determine the type of connection between sentences 12 and 13.

Remember that the previous one is ONE ABOVE. Thus, if the interval 11-18 is indicated, then the required sentence is within the limits indicated in the task, and answer 11 may be correct if this sentence is related to the 10th topic indicated in the task. There may be 1 or more answers. Point for successfully completing the task - 1.

Let's move on to the theoretical part.

Most often we use this model of text construction: each sentence is linked to the next one, this is called a chain link. (We will talk about parallel communication below). We speak and write, we combine independent sentences into text using simple rules. Here's the gist: two adjacent sentences must be about the same subject.

All types of communication are usually divided into lexical, morphological and syntactic. As a rule, when connecting sentences into a text, they can be used several types of communication at the same time. This greatly facilitates the search for the desired sentence in the specified fragment. Let us dwell in detail on each of the types.

23.1. Communication using lexical means.

1. Words of one thematic group.

Words of the same thematic group are words that have a common lexical meaning and denote similar, but not identical concepts.

Example words: 1) Forest, path, trees; 2) buildings, streets, sidewalks, squares; 3) water, fish, waves; hospital, nurses, emergency room, ward

Water was clean and transparent. Waves They ran ashore slowly and silently.

2. Generic words.

Generic words are words connected by the relation genus - species: genus is a broader concept, species is a narrower one.

Example words: Chamomile - flower; birch - tree; car - transport and so on.

Example sentences: It was still growing under the window birch. I have so many memories associated with this tree...

Field daisies are becoming rare. But this is unpretentious flower.

3 Lexical repetition

Lexical repetition is the repetition of the same word in the same word form.

The closest connection of sentences is expressed primarily in repetition. Repetition of one or another member of a sentence - main feature chain connection. For example, in sentences Behind the garden there was a forest. The forest was deaf and neglected the connection is built according to the “subject - subject” model, that is, the subject named at the end of the first sentence is repeated at the beginning of the next; in sentences Physics is a science. Science must use dialectical method - “model predicate - subject”; in the example The boat moored to the shore. The shore was strewn with small pebbles- model “circumstance - subject” and so on. But if in the first two examples the words forest and science stand in each of the adjacent sentences in the same case, then the word shore It has different shapes. Lexical repetition in Unified State Exam assignments repetition of a word in the same word form, used to enhance the impact on the reader, will be considered.

In texts of artistic and journalistic styles, the chain connection through lexical repetition often has an expressive, emotional character, especially when the repetition is at the junction of sentences:

Aral disappears from the map of the Fatherland sea.

Whole sea!

The use of repetition here is used to enhance the impact on the reader.

Let's look at examples. We are not yet taking additional means of communication into account; we are looking only at lexical repetition.

(36) I heard a very brave man who went through the war once say: “ It was scary, very scary." (37) He spoke the truth: he it was scary.

(15) As a teacher, I had the opportunity to meet young people yearning for a clear and precise answer to the question about higher values life. (16) 0 values, allowing you to distinguish good from evil and choose the best and most worthy.

note: different forms of words refer to a different type of connection. For more information about the difference, see the paragraph on word forms.

4 Similar words

Cognates are words with the same root and common meaning.

Example words: Homeland, be born, birth, generation; tear, break, burst

Example sentences: I'm lucky be born healthy and strong. The story of my birth unremarkable.

Although I understood that a relationship was necessary break, but couldn't do it myself. This gap would be very painful for both of us.

5 Synonyms

Synonyms are words of the same part of speech that are close in meaning.

Example words: be bored, frown, be sad; fun, joy, jubilation

Example sentences: In parting she said that will miss you. I knew that too I'll be sad from our walks and conversations.

Joy grabbed me, picked me up and carried me... Jubilation there seemed to be no boundaries: Lina answered, finally answered!

It should be noted that synonyms are difficult to find in the text if you need to look for connections only using synonyms. But, as a rule, along with this method of communication, others are also used. So, in example 1 there is a conjunction Same , this connection will be discussed below.

6 Contextual synonyms

Contextual synonyms are words of the same part of speech that are similar in meaning only in a given context, since they relate to the same object (feature, action).

Example words: kitten, poor fellow, naughty; girl, student, beauty

Example sentences: Kitty has been living with us for quite some time. My husband took it off poor fellow from the tree where he climbed to escape the dogs.

I guessed that she student. Young woman continued to remain silent, despite all efforts on my part to get her to talk.

These words are even more difficult to find in the text: after all, the author makes them synonyms. But along with this method of communication, others are also used, which makes the search easier.

7 Antonyms

Antonyms are words of the same part of speech that have opposite meanings.

Example words: laughter, tears; hot Cold

Example sentences: I pretended that I liked this joke and squeezed out something like laughter. But tears They choked me, and I quickly left the room.

Her words were hot and burned. Eyes chilled cold. I felt like I was under a contrast shower...

8 Contextual antonyms

Contextual antonyms are words of the same part of speech that are opposite in meaning only in a given context.

Example words: mouse - lion; home - work green - ripe

Example sentences: On work this man was gray with the mouse. At home woke up in it a lion.

Ripe The berries can be safely used to make jam. And here green It’s better not to put them in, they are usually bitter and can ruin the taste.

We draw attention to the non-random coincidence of terms(synonyms, antonyms, including contextual ones) in this task and tasks 22 and 24: this is one and the same lexical phenomenon, but viewed from a different angle. Lexical means can serve to connect two adjacent sentences, or they may not be a connecting link. At the same time, they will always be a means of expression, that is, they have every chance of being the object of tasks 22 and 24. Therefore, advice: when completing task 23, pay attention to these tasks. You will learn more theoretical material about lexical means from the reference rule for task 24.

23.2. Communication using morphological means

Along with lexical means of communication, morphological ones are also used.

1. Pronoun

A pronoun connection is a connection in which ONE word or SEVERAL words from the previous sentence are replaced by a pronoun. To see such a connection, you need to know what a pronoun is and what categories of meaning there are.

What you need to know:

Pronouns are words that are used instead of a name (noun, adjective, numeral), denote persons, indicate objects, characteristics of objects, the number of objects, without naming them specifically.

Based on their meaning and grammatical features, nine categories of pronouns are distinguished:

1) personal (I, we; you, you; he, she, it; they);

2) returnable (self);

3) possessive (my, yours, ours, yours, yours); used as possessives also forms of personal: his (jacket), her work),their (merit).

4) demonstrative (this, that, such, such, such, so much);

5) definitive(himself, most, all, everyone, each, other);

6) relative (who, what, which, which, which, how many, whose);

7) interrogative (who? what? which? whose? which? how many? where? when? where? from where? why? why? what?);

8) negative (nobody, nothing, nobody);

9) indefinite (someone, something, someone, anyone, anyone, someone).

Do not forget that pronouns change by case, therefore, “you”, “me”, “about us”, “about them”, “no one”, “everyone” are forms of pronouns.

As a rule, the task indicates WHAT category the pronoun should be, but this is not necessary if in the specified period there are no other pronouns that act as LINKING elements. You need to clearly understand that NOT EVERY pronoun that appears in the text is a connecting link.

Let's look at the examples and determine how sentences 1 and 2 are related; 2 and 3.

1) Our school has recently been renovated. 2) I finished it many years ago, but sometimes I went in and wandered around the school floors. 3) Now they are some strangers, different, not mine....

There are two pronouns in the second sentence, both personal, I And her. Which one is the one paperclip, which connects the first and second sentence? If it's a pronoun I, what it is replaced in sentence 1? Nothing. What replaces the pronoun? her? Word " school" from the first sentence. We conclude: connection using a personal pronoun her.

There are three pronouns in the third sentence: they are somehow mine. The second is connected only by a pronoun They(=floors from the second sentence). Rest do not correlate in any way with the words of the second sentence and do not replace anything. Conclusion: the second sentence connects the third with the pronoun They.

What is the practical importance of understanding this method of communication? The fact is that pronouns can and should be used instead of nouns, adjectives and numerals. Use, but do not abuse, since the abundance of words “he”, “his”, “their” sometimes leads to misunderstanding and confusion.

2. Adverb

Communication using adverbs is a connection, the features of which depend on the meaning of the adverb.

To see such a connection, you need to know what an adverb is and what categories of meaning there are.

Adverbs are unchangeable words that denote a characteristic by action and relate to the verb.

Adverbs of the following meanings can be used as means of communication:

Time and space: below, on the left, next to, at the beginning, long ago and the like.

Example sentences: We got to work. At the beginning it was hard: I couldn’t work as a team, I had no ideas. After got involved, felt their strength and even got excited.note: Sentences 2 and 3 are related to sentence 1 using the indicated adverbs. This type of connection is called parallel connection.

We climbed to the very top of the mountain. Around There were only the treetops of us. Near The clouds floated with us. A similar example of a parallel connection: 2 and 3 are connected to 1 using the indicated adverbs.

Demonstrative adverbs. (They are sometimes called pronominal adverbs, since they do not name how or where the action takes place, but only point to it): there, here, there, then, from there, because, so and the like.

Example sentences: Last summer I was on holiday in one of the sanatoriums in Belarus. From there It was almost impossible to make a call, let alone surf the Internet. The adverb “from there” replaces the whole phrase.

Life went on as usual: I studied, my mother and father worked, my sister got married and left with her husband. So three years have passed. The adverb “so” summarizes the entire content of the previous sentence.

It is possible to use other categories of adverbs, for example, negative: B school and university I didn’t have good relationships with my peers. Yes and nowhere did not fold; however, I didn’t suffer from this, I had a family, I had brothers, they replaced my friends.

3. Union

Communication using conjunctions is the most common type of connection, thanks to which various relationships arise between sentences related to the meaning of the conjunction.

Communication using coordinating conjunctions: but, and, and, but, also, or, however and others. The assignment may or may not indicate the type of union. Therefore, the material on alliances should be repeated.

More details about coordinating conjunctions are described in a special section.

Example sentences: By the end of the day off we were incredibly tired. But the mood was amazing! Communication using the adversative conjunction “but”.

It's always been like this... Or that's how it seemed to me...Connection using the disjunctive conjunction “or”.

We draw attention to the fact that very rarely only one conjunction is involved in the formation of a connection: as a rule, lexical means of communication are used simultaneously.

Communication using subordinating conjunctions: because, so. A very atypical case, since subordinating conjunctions connect sentences within a complex sentence. In our opinion, with such a connection there is a deliberate break in the structure of a complex sentence.

Example sentences: I was in complete despair... For I didn’t know what to do, where to go and, most importantly, who to turn to for help. The conjunction for has the meaning because, because, indicates the reason for the hero’s condition.

I didn’t pass the exams, I didn’t go to college, I couldn’t ask for help from my parents and I wouldn’t do it. So There was only one thing left to do: find a job. The conjunction “so” has the meaning of consequence.

4. Particles

Particle Communication always accompanies other types of communication.

Particles after all, and only, here, there, only, even, same add additional shades to the proposal.

Example sentences: Call your parents, talk to them. After all It's so simple and at the same time difficult - to love....

Everyone in the house was already asleep. AND only Grandma muttered quietly: she always read prayers before going to bed, asking the heavenly forces for a better life for us.

After my husband left, my soul became empty and my house deserted. Even the cat, who usually rushed like a meteor around the apartment, just yawns sleepily and keeps trying to climb into my arms. Here whose arms would I lean on...Please note that connecting particles come at the beginning of the sentence.

5. Word forms

Communication using word form is that in adjacent sentences the same word is used in different

  • if this noun - number and case
  • If adjective - gender, number and case
  • If pronoun - gender, number and case depending on the category
  • If verb in person (gender), number, tense

Verbs and participles, verbs and gerunds are considered different words.

Example sentences: Noise gradually increased. From this growing noise I felt uneasy.

I knew my son captain. With myself captain fate did not bring me together, but I knew that it was only a matter of time.

note: the assignment may say “word forms”, and then it is ONE word in different forms;

“forms of words” - and these are already two words repeated in adjacent sentences.

There is a particular difficulty in the difference between word forms and lexical repetition.

Information for teachers.

Let's consider as an example the most difficult task of the real Unified State Exam 2016. Here is the full fragment published on the FIPI website in “ Guidelines for teachers (2016)"

Difficulties for examinees in completing task 23 were caused by cases where the task condition required distinguishing between the form of a word and lexical repetition as a means of connecting sentences in the text. In these cases, when analyzing language material, students should pay attention to the fact that lexical repetition involves the repetition of a lexical unit with a special stylistic task.

We present the condition of task 23 and a fragment of the text of one of Unified State Exam options 2016:

“Among sentences 8–18, find one that is related to the previous one using lexical repetition. Write the number of this offer."

Below is the beginning of the text given for analysis.

- (7) What kind of an artist are you when you don’t love your native land, eccentric!

(8) Maybe that’s why Berg wasn’t good at landscapes. (9) He preferred a portrait, a poster. (10) He tried to find the style of his time, but these attempts were full of failures and ambiguities.

(11) One day Berg received a letter from the artist Yartsev. (12) He called him to come to the Murom forests, where he spent the summer.

(13) August was hot and windless. (14) Yartsev lived far from the deserted station, in the forest, on the shore deep lake with black water. (15) He rented a hut from a forester. (16) Berg was driven to the lake by the forester’s son Vanya Zotov, a stooped and shy boy. (17) Berg lived on the lake for about a month. (18) He was not going to work and did not take oil paints with him.

Proposition 15 is related to Proposition 14 by personal pronoun "He"(Yartsev).

Proposition 16 is related to Proposition 15 by word forms "forester": prepositional case form, controlled by a verb, and non-prepositional form, controlled by a noun. These word forms express different meanings: the meaning is object and the meaning of belonging, and the use of the word forms in question does not carry a stylistic load.

Proposition 17 is related to sentence 16 by word forms (“on the lake - to the lake”; "Berga - Berg").

Proposition 18 is related to the previous one by personal pronoun "he"(Berg).

The correct answer in task 23 of this option is 10. It is sentence 10 of the text that is connected with the previous one (sentence 9) using lexical repetition (the word “he”).

It should be noted that there is no consensus among the authors of various manuals, What is considered a lexical repetition - the same word in different cases (persons, numbers) or in the same one. The authors of the books of the publishing house “National Education”, “Exam”, “Legion” (authors Tsybulko I.P., Vasilyev I.P., Gosteva Yu.N., Senina N.A.) do not give a single example in which the words in various forms would be considered lexical repetition.

At the same time very complex cases, in which words in different cases coincide in form, are treated differently in the manuals. The author of the books N.A. Senina sees this as a form of the word. I.P. Tsybulko (based on materials from a 2017 book) sees lexical repetition. So, in sentences like I saw the sea in a dream. The sea was calling me the word “sea” has different cases, but at the same time it undoubtedly has the same stylistic task that I.P. writes about. Tsybulko. Without delving into the linguistic solution to this issue, we will outline the position of RESHUEGE and give recommendations.

1. All obviously non-matching forms are word forms, not lexical repetition. Please note that we are talking about the same linguistic phenomenon as in task 24. And in 24, lexical repetitions are only repeated words in the same forms.

2. There will be no matching forms in the tasks on RESHUEGE: if the linguist specialists themselves cannot figure it out, then school graduates cannot do it.

3. If you come across tasks with similar difficulties during the exam, we look at those additional means of communication that will help you make your choice. After all, the compilers of KIMs may have their own, separate opinion. Unfortunately, this may be the case.

23.3 Syntactic means.

Introductory words

Communication with the help of introductory words accompanies and complements any other connection, adding shades of meaning characteristic of introductory words.

Of course, you need to know which words are introductory.

He was hired. Unfortunately, Anton was too ambitious. On the one side, the company needed such individuals, on the other hand, he was not inferior to anyone or anything, if something was, as he said, below his level.

Let us give examples of the definition of means of communication in a short text.

(1) We met Masha several months ago. (2) My parents had not seen her yet, but did not insist on meeting her. (3) It seemed that she also did not strive for rapprochement, which somewhat upset me.

Let's determine how the sentences in this text are connected.

Sentence 2 is connected to sentence 1 using a personal pronoun her, which replaces the name Masha in sentence 1.

Sentence 3 is related to sentence 2 using word forms she her: "she" is a form nominative case, “her” is the genitive case form.

In addition, sentence 3 also has other means of communication: it is a conjunction Same, introductory word it seemed, series of synonymous constructions didn't insist on getting to know each other And didn't try to get closer.

“Techniques - (A) _______ (“wound” in sentences 20-21), (B) _______ (sentences 54-55) help the reader to realize the persuasiveness of the author’s arguments, the polemical pathos of the text as a whole. Tropes: (C) _______ (“majestic lady” in sentence 5), (D) _______ (sentence 43) indicate the emotional attitude of the author of the text to the events taking place.”

1) question-and-answer form of presentation

2) metaphor

3) homogeneous members

4) professional vocabulary

6) lexical repetition

7) parcellation

9) contextual antonyms

Explanation (see also Rule below).

“Techniques - (A) Lexical repetition (“wound” in sentences 20-21), (B) PARCELLATION (sentences 54-55) help the reader to realize the persuasiveness of the author’s arguments, the polemical pathos of the text as a whole. Tropes: (B) epithet (“majestic lady” in sentence 5), (D) Metaphor (sentence 43 - an avalanche of responses fell) indicate the emotional attitude of the author of the text to the events taking place.”

6) Lexical repetition - repetition of words used for the purposes of verbal expressiveness.

7) PARTELLATION - the deliberate division of a text connected intonationally and in writing into several punctuationally independent segments.

8) Epithet is a figurative definition.

2) Metaphor is a hidden comparison.

Answer: 6782.

Answer: 6782

Rule: Task 26. Language means of expression

ANALYSIS OF MEANS OF EXPRESSION.

The purpose of the task is to determine the means of expression used in the review by establishing correspondence between the gaps indicated by letters in the text of the review and the numbers with definitions. You need to write matches only in the order in which the letters appear in the text. If you do not know what is hidden under a particular letter, you must put “0” in place of this number. You can get from 1 to 4 points for the task.

When completing task 26, you should remember that you are filling in the gaps in the review, i.e. restore the text, and with it semantic and grammatical connection. Therefore, an analysis of the review itself can often serve as an additional clue: various adjectives of one kind or another, predicates consistent with the omissions, etc. It will make it easier to complete the task by dividing the list of terms into two groups: the first includes terms based on the meaning of the word, the second - the structure of the sentence. You can carry out this division knowing that all funds are divided into TWO large groups: the first includes lexical (non-special means) and tropes; secondly, figures of speech (some of them are called syntactic).

26.1 TROPIC WORD OR EXPRESSION USED IN A FIGUREABLE MEANING TO CREATE AN ARTISTIC IMAGE AND ACHIEVE GREATER EXPRESSIVENESS. Tropes include such techniques as epithet, comparison, personification, metaphor, metonymy, sometimes they include hyperbole and litotes.

Note: The assignment usually states that these are TRAILS.

In the review, examples of tropes are indicated in parentheses, like a phrase.

1.Epithet(in translation from Greek - application, addition) - this is a figurative definition that marks an essential feature for a given context in the depicted phenomenon. The epithet differs from a simple definition in its artistic expressiveness and imagery. The epithet is based on a hidden comparison.

Epithets include all “colorful” definitions that are most often expressed adjectives:

sad orphaned land(F.I. Tyutchev), gray fog, lemon light, silent peace(I.A. Bunin).

Epithets can also be expressed:

-nouns, acting as applications or predicates, giving a figurative characteristic of the subject: winter sorceress; mother is the damp earth; The poet is a lyre, and not just the nanny of his soul(M. Gorky);

-adverbs, acting as circumstances: In the wild north stands alone...(M. Yu. Lermontov); The leaves were tensely stretched in the wind (K. G. Paustovsky);

-participles: waves rush thundering and sparkling;

-pronouns, expressing the superlative degree of a particular state of the human soul:

After all, there were fighting fights, Yes, they say, still which! (M. Yu. Lermontov);

-participles and participial phrases: Nightingales in vocabulary rumbling announce the forest limits (B. L. Pasternak); I also admit the appearance of... greyhound writers who cannot prove where they spent the night yesterday, and who have no other words in their language except the words not remembering kinship(M. E. Saltykov-Shchedrin).

2. Comparison is a visual technique based on the comparison of one phenomenon or concept with another. Unlike metaphor, comparison is always binary: it names both compared objects (phenomenon, sign, action).

The villages are burning, they have no protection.

The sons of the fatherland are defeated by the enemy,

And the glow like an eternal meteor,

Playing in the clouds frightens the eye. (M. Yu. Lermontov)

Comparisons are expressed in various ways:

Instrumental case form of nouns:

Nightingale vagrant Youth flew by,

Wave in bad weather Joy fades away (A.V. Koltsov)

Comparative form of an adjective or adverb: These eyes greener sea ​​and our cypresses darker(A. Akhmatova);

Comparative phrases with conjunctions like, as if, as if, etc.:

Like a predatory beast, to the humble abode

The winner breaks in with bayonets... (M. Yu. Lermontov);

Using the words similar, similar, this is:

On the eyes of a cautious cat

Similar your eyes (A. Akhmatova);

Using comparative clauses:

Golden leaves swirled

In the pinkish water of the pond,

Like a light flock of butterflies

Flies breathlessly towards a star. (S. A. Yesenin)

3.Metaphor(in translation from Greek - transfer) is a word or expression that is used in a figurative meaning based on the similarity of two objects or phenomena for some reason. Unlike a comparison, which contains both what is being compared and what is being compared with, a metaphor contains only the second, which creates compactness and figurativeness in the use of the word. A metaphor can be based on the similarity of objects in shape, color, volume, purpose, sensations, etc.: a waterfall of stars, an avalanche of letters, a wall of fire, an abyss of grief, a pearl of poetry, a spark of love and etc.

All metaphors are divided into two groups:

1) general language(“erased”): golden hands, a storm in a teacup, moving mountains, strings of the soul, love has faded;

2) artistic(individual author’s, poetic):

And the stars fade diamond thrill

IN painless cold dawn (M. Voloshin);

Empty skies transparent glass (A. Akhmatova);

AND blue, bottomless eyes

They bloom on the far shore. (A. A. Blok)

Metaphor happens not just single: it can develop in the text, forming entire chains of figurative expressions, in many cases - covering, as if permeating the entire text. This extended, complex metaphor, a complete artistic image.

4. Personification- this is a type of metaphor based on the transfer of signs of a living being to natural phenomena, objects and concepts. Most often, personifications are used to describe nature:

Rolling through the sleepy valleys, the sleepy mists lay down, And only the sound of a horse's tramp is lost in the distance. The autumn day has faded, turning pale, with the fragrant leaves folded, half-withered flowers enjoying dreamless sleep.. (M. Yu. Lermontov)

5. Metonymy(translated from Greek - renaming) is the transfer of a name from one object to another based on their contiguity. Adjacency can be a manifestation of connection:

Between action and the instrument of action: Their villages and fields for a violent raid He doomed to swords and fires(A.S. Pushkin);

Between an object and the material from which the object is made: ... or on silver, I ate on gold(A. S. Griboyedov);

Between a place and the people in that place: The city was noisy, flags crackled, wet roses fell from the bowls of flower girls... (Yu. K. Olesha)

6. Synecdoche(in translation from Greek - correlation) - this a type of metonymy, based on the transfer of meaning from one phenomenon to another based on the quantitative relationship between them. Most often, transfer occurs:

From less to more: Even a bird does not fly to him, And a tiger does not come... (A.S. Pushkin);

From part to whole: Beard, why are you still silent?(A.P. Chekhov)

7. Periphrase, or periphrasis(translated from Greek - a descriptive expression) is a phrase that is used instead of any word or phrase. For example, Petersburg in verse

A. S. Pushkin - “Peter’s Creation”, “Beauty and Wonder of the Full Countries”, “The City of Petrov”; A. A. Blok in the poems of M. I. Tsvetaeva - “a knight without reproach”, “blue-eyed snow singer”, “snow swan”, “almighty of my soul”.

8.Hyperbole(translated from Greek - exaggeration) is a figurative expression containing an exorbitant exaggeration of any attribute of an object, phenomenon, action: A rare bird will fly to the middle of the Dnieper(N.V. Gogol)

And at that very moment there were couriers, couriers, couriers on the streets... can you imagine, thirty five thousands only couriers! (N.V. Gogol).

9. Litota(translated from Greek - smallness, moderation) is a figurative expression containing an exorbitant understatement of any attribute of an object, phenomenon, action: What tiny cows! There is, right, less than a pinhead.(I. A. Krylov)

And walking importantly, in decorous calm, the horse is led by the bridle by a peasant in large boots, in a short sheepskin coat, in large mittens... and from the nails myself!(N.A. Nekrasov)

10. Irony(in translation from Greek - pretense) is the use of a word or statement in a sense opposite to the direct one. Irony is a type of allegory in which mockery is hidden behind an outwardly positive assessment: Why, smart one, are you delirious, head?(I. A. Krylov)

26.2 “NON-SPECIAL” LEXICAL VISUATIVE AND EXPRESSIVE MEANS OF LANGUAGE

Note: In assignments it is sometimes indicated that this is a lexical device. Typically, in a review of task 24, an example of a lexical device is given in parentheses, either as a single word or as a phrase in which one of the words is in italics. Please note: these are the products most often needed find in task 22!

11. Synonyms, i.e. words of the same part of speech, different in sound, but identical or similar in lexical meaning and differing from each other either in shades of meaning or stylistic coloring ( brave - brave, run - rush, eyes(neutral) - eyes(poet.)), have great expressive power.

Synonyms can be contextual.

12. Antonyms, i.e. words of the same part of speech, opposite in meaning ( truth - lie, good - evil, disgusting - wonderful), also have great expressive capabilities.

Antonyms can be contextual, that is, they become antonyms only in a given context.

Lies happen good or evil,

Compassionate or merciless,

Lies happen dexterous and awkward,

Prudent and reckless,

Intoxicating and joyless.

13. Phraseologisms as a means of linguistic expression

Phraseologisms (phraseological expressions, idioms), i.e. phrases and sentences reproduced in ready-made form, in which the integral meaning dominates the meanings of their constituent components and is not a simple sum of such meanings ( get into trouble, be in seventh heaven, bone of contention), have great expressive capabilities. The expressiveness of phraseological units is determined by:

1) their vivid imagery, including mythological ( the cat cried like a squirrel in a wheel, Ariadne's thread, sword of Damocles, Achilles heel);

2) the classification of many of them: a) to the category of high ( the voice of one crying in the wilderness, sink into oblivion) or reduced (colloquial, colloquial: like a fish in water, neither sleep nor spirit, lead by the nose, lather your neck, hang your ears); b) to the category of linguistic means with a positive emotional-expressive connotation ( to store like the apple of your eye - trade.) or with a negative emotional-expressive coloring (without the king in the head - disapproved, small fry - disdained, worthless - despised.).

14. Stylistically colored vocabulary

To enhance expressiveness in the text, all categories of stylistically colored vocabulary can be used:

1) emotional-expressive (evaluative) vocabulary, including:

a) words with a positive emotional-expressive assessment: solemn, sublime (including Old Slavonicisms): inspiration, future, fatherland, aspirations, hidden, unshakable; sublimely poetic: serene, radiant, enchantment, azure; approving: noble, outstanding, amazing, brave; endearments: sunshine, darling, daughter

b) words with a negative emotional-expressive assessment: disapproving: speculation, bickering, nonsense; dismissive: upstart, hustler; contemptuous: dunce, crammer, scribbling; abusive/

2) functionally and stylistically colored vocabulary, including:

a) book: scientific (terms: alliteration, cosine, interference); official business: the undersigned, report; journalistic: report, interview; artistic and poetic: azure, eyes, cheeks

b) colloquial (everyday): dad, boy, braggart, healthy

15. Vocabulary limited use

To enhance expressiveness in the text, all categories of vocabulary of limited use can also be used, including:

Dialectal vocabulary (words that are used by residents of a particular area: kochet - rooster, veksha - squirrel);

Colloquial vocabulary (words with a pronounced reduced stylistic connotation: familiar, rude, dismissive, abusive, located on the border or outside the literary norm: beggar, drunkard, cracker, trash talker);

Professional vocabulary (words that are used in professional speech and are not included in the system of general literary language: galley - in the speech of sailors, duck - in the speech of journalists, window - in the speech of teachers);

Slang vocabulary (words characteristic of youth slang: party, frills, cool; computer: brains - computer memory, keyboard - keyboard; to the soldier: demobilization, scoop, perfume; criminal jargon: bro, raspberry);

The vocabulary is outdated (historicisms are words that have fallen out of use due to the disappearance of the objects or phenomena they denote: boyar, oprichnina, horse-drawn horse; archaisms - outdated words, naming objects and concepts for which new names have appeared in the language: forehead - forehead, sail - sail); - new vocabulary (neologisms - words that have recently entered the language and have not yet lost their novelty: blog, slogan, teenager).

26.3 FIGURES (RHETORICAL FIGURES, STYLISTIC FIGURES, FIGURES OF SPEECH) ARE STYLISTIC DEVICES based on special combinations of words that go beyond the scope of normal practical use, and aimed at enhancing the expressiveness and figurativeness of the text. The main figures of speech include: rhetorical question, rhetorical exclamation, rhetorical appeal, repetition, syntactic parallelism, polyunion, non-union, ellipsis, inversion, parcellation, antithesis, gradation, oxymoron. Unlike lexical means, this is the level of a sentence or several sentences.

Note: In the tasks there is no clear definition format indicating these means: they are called syntactic means, and a technique, and simply a means of expressiveness, and a figure. In task 24, the figure of speech is indicated by the number of the sentence given in brackets.

16.A rhetorical question is a figure that contains a statement in the form of a question. A rhetorical question does not require an answer; it is used to enhance the emotionality, expressiveness of speech, and to attract the reader’s attention to a particular phenomenon:

Why did he give his hand to insignificant slanderers, Why did he believe false words and caresses, He who comprehended people from a young age?.. (M. Yu. Lermontov);

17.Rhetorical exclamation is a figure that contains a statement in the form of an exclamation. Rhetorical exclamations enhance the expression of certain feelings in a message; they are usually distinguished not only by special emotionality, but also by solemnity and elation:

That was on the morning of our years - Oh happiness! oh tears! O forest! oh life! oh sunshine! O fresh spirit of birch. (A.K. Tolstoy);

Alas! The proud country bowed to the power of a stranger. (M. Yu. Lermontov)

18.Rhetorical appeal- this is a stylistic figure consisting of an emphasized appeal to someone or something to enhance the expressiveness of speech. It serves not so much to name the addressee of the speech, but to express the attitude towards what is said in the text. Rhetorical appeals can create solemnity and pathos of speech, express joy, regret and other shades of mood and emotional state:

My friends! Our union is wonderful. He, like the soul, is uncontrollable and eternal (A.S. Pushkin);

Oh, deep night! Oh, cold autumn! Mute! (K. D. Balmont)

19.Repetition (positional-lexical repetition, lexical repetition)- this is a stylistic figure consisting of the repetition of any member of a sentence (word), part of a sentence or a whole sentence, several sentences, stanzas in order to attract special attention to them.

Types of repetition are anaphora, epiphora and pickup.

Anaphora(translated from Greek - ascent, rise), or unity of beginning, is the repetition of a word or group of words at the beginning of lines, stanzas or sentences:

Lazy the hazy noon breathes,

Lazy the river is rolling.

And in the fiery and pure firmament

Clouds are melting lazily (F.I. Tyutchev);

Epiphora(translated from Greek - addition, final sentence of a period) is the repetition of words or groups of words at the end of lines, stanzas or sentences:

Although man is not eternal,

That which is eternal - humanely.

What is a day or an age?

Before what is infinite?

Although man is not eternal,

That which is eternal - humanely(A. A. Fet);

They got a loaf of light bread - joy!

Today the film is good in the club - joy!

A two-volume edition of Paustovsky was brought to the bookstore. joy!(A.I. Solzhenitsyn)

Pickup- this is a repetition of any segment of speech (sentence, poetic line) at the beginning of the corresponding segment of speech following it:

He fell down on the cold snow,

On the cold snow, like a pine tree,

Like a pine tree in a damp forest (M. Yu. Lermontov);

20. Parallelism (syntactic parallelism)(in translation from Greek - walking next to) - identical or similar construction of adjacent parts of the text: adjacent sentences, poetic lines, stanzas, which, when correlated, create a single image:

I look at the future with fear,

I look at the past with longing... (M. Yu. Lermontov);

I was a ringing string for you,

I was your blooming spring,

But you didn't want flowers

And you didn't hear the words? (K. D. Balmont)

Often using antithesis: What is he looking for in a distant land? What did he throw in his native land?(M. Lermontov); Not the country is for business, but business is for the country (from the newspaper).

21. Inversion(translated from Greek - rearrangement, inversion) is a change in the usual order of words in a sentence in order to emphasize the semantic significance of any element of the text (word, sentence), giving the phrase a special stylistic coloring: solemn, high-sounding or, conversely, colloquial, somewhat reduced characteristics. The following combinations are considered inverted in Russian:

The agreed definition comes after the word being defined: I’m sitting behind bars in dungeon dank(M. Yu. Lermontov); But there were no swells running through this sea; the stuffy air did not flow: it was brewing great thunderstorm(I. S. Turgenev);

Additions and circumstances expressed by nouns come before the word to which they relate: Hours of monotonous battle(monotonous clock strike);

22.Parcellation(in translation from French - particle) - a stylistic device that consists in dividing a single syntactic structure of a sentence into several intonational and semantic units - phrases. At the place of division of a sentence, a period, an exclamation point and question marks, ellipsis. In the morning, bright as a splint. Scary. Long. Ratnym. Was broken rifle regiment. Our. In an unequal battle(R. Rozhdestvensky); Why isn't anyone outraged? Education and healthcare! The most important areas of society! Not mentioned in this document at all(From newspapers); It is necessary for the state to remember the main thing: its citizens are not individuals. And people. (From newspapers)

23. Non-union and multi-union- syntactic figures based on deliberate omission, or, conversely, deliberate repetition of conjunctions. In the first case, when omitting conjunctions, speech becomes condensed, compact, and dynamic. The actions and events depicted here quickly, instantly unfold, replacing each other:

Swede, Russian - stabs, chops, cuts.

Drumming, clicks, grinding.

The thunder of guns, stomping, neighing, groaning,

And death and hell on all sides. (A.S. Pushkin)

When multi-union speech, on the contrary, slows down, pauses and repeated conjunctions highlight words, expressively emphasizing their semantic significance:

But And grandson, And great-grandson, And great-great-grandson

They grow in me while I grow... (P.G. Antokolsky)

24.Period- a long, polynomial sentence or a very common simple sentence, which is distinguished by completeness, unity of topic and intonational division into two parts. In the first part, the syntactic repetition of the same type of subordinate clauses (or members of the sentence) occurs with an increasing increase in intonation, then there is a significant pause separating it, and in the second part, where the conclusion is given, the tone of voice noticeably decreases. This intonation design forms a kind of circle:

If I wanted to limit my life to the home circle, / When a pleasant lot ordered me to be a father, a husband, / If I were captivated by the family picture for even a single moment, then it’s true that I wouldn’t look for another bride besides you. (A.S. Pushkin)

25.Antithesis or opposition(translated from Greek - opposition) is a turn in which opposing concepts, positions, images are sharply contrasted. To create an antithesis, antonyms are usually used - general linguistic and contextual:

You are rich, I am very poor, You are a prose writer, I am a poet(A.S. Pushkin);

Yesterday I looked into your eyes,

And now everything is looking sideways,

Yesterday I was sitting before the birds,

All larks these days are crows!

I'm stupid and you're smart

Alive, but I'm dumbfounded.

O cry of women of all times:

“My dear, what have I done to you?” (M. I. Tsvetaeva)

26.Gradation(in translation from Latin - gradual increase, strengthening) - a technique consisting of a sequential arrangement of words, expressions, tropes (epithets, metaphors, comparisons) in the order of strengthening (increasing) or weakening (decreasing) of a characteristic. Increasing gradation usually used to enhance the imagery, emotional expressiveness and impact of the text:

I called you, but you didn’t look back, I shed tears, but you didn’t condescend(A. A. Blok);

Glowed, burned, shone huge Blue eyes. (V. A. Soloukhin)

Descending gradation is used less frequently and usually serves to enhance the semantic content of the text and create imagery:

He brought mortal resin

Yes, a branch with withered leaves. (A.S. Pushkin)

27.Oxymoron(translated from Greek - witty-stupid) is a stylistic figure in which usually incompatible concepts are combined, usually contradicting each other ( bitter joy, ringing silence and so on.); at the same time, a new meaning is obtained, and the speech acquires special expressiveness: From that hour began for Ilya sweet torment, lightly scorching the soul (I. S. Shmelev);

Eat joyful melancholy in the red of dawn (S. A. Yesenin);

But their ugly beauty I soon comprehended the mystery. (M. Yu. Lermontov)

28. Allegory– allegory, transmission of an abstract concept through a concrete image: Foxes and wolves must win(cunning, malice, greed).

29.Default- a deliberate break in the statement, conveying the emotion of the speech and suggesting that the reader will guess what was unspoken: But I wanted... Perhaps you...

In addition to the above syntactic means of expressiveness, the tests also contain the following:

-exclamation sentences;

- dialogue, hidden dialogue;

-question-and-answer form of presentation a form of presentation in which questions and answers to questions alternate;

-rows of homogeneous members;

-citation;

-introductory words and constructions

-Incomplete sentences– sentences in which any member is missing that is necessary for completeness of structure and meaning. Missing sentence members can be restored and contextualized.

Including ellipsis, that is, omission of the predicate.

These concepts are covered in the school syntax course. That is why, probably, these means of expression are most often called syntactic in reviews.

Write an essay based on the text you read.

Formulate one of the problems posed by the author of the text.

Comment on the formulated problem. Include in your comment two illustrative examples from the text you read that you think are important for understanding the problem in the source text (avoid excessive quoting). Explain the meaning of each example and indicate the semantic connection between them.

The volume of the essay is at least 150 words.

Work written without reference to the text read (not based on this text) is not graded. If the essay is a retelling or a complete rewrite of the original text without any comments, then such work is graded 0 points.

Write an essay carefully, legible handwriting.

Explanation.

Problems:

1. The problem of indifference.

2. The problem of inept handling of words.

1. Indifference is often hidden behind the mask of “correctness”, “compliance with certain rules”, but cannot be justified by anything.

2. A word can hurt a person, it can “kill”. This is why it is so important to treat your words thoughtfully and handle words carefully.

Explanation.

1) Sentences 2-4 present the narrative.

2) Proposition 19 contains a conclusion from the content of sentences 1-18.

3) Sentences 32-33 present the narrative.

4) Propositions 50-57 contain reasoning.

5) Sentences 45-47 present reasoning, not description.

Answer: 1234.

  • An example of a finished essay for the Unified State Exam.
  • The source text from which the essay is written.

The problem of thoughtless use of words and tactlessness in relation to others

Essay sample

A talented poetess once remarked:

Be careful with your words
They both wound and execute,
Sometimes they are like stones in the soul,
Uncleaned by anyone, they lie.

One cannot but agree with this idea. A word can bring a person untold joy, and sometimes plunge him into terrible despair. The text by S. Lvov is dedicated to this topic. His main problem is the problem of thoughtless handling of words and, as a consequence, the problem of tactlessness in relations with one’s neighbor.

This problem is very relevant for our modern life. How often do we encounter this kind of tactlessness in various magazine and newspaper articles, and in publications on the Internet.

S. Lvov is very concerned about this careless handling of words. He gives an example of a situation from his life. The famous writer forever offended the boy by calling him a “tongued fat man” in his article. And the girl writer ended up in the hospital after receiving a harsh review of her work. “Be careful with your words! It can seriously hurt!” - the author calls in the finale.

S. Lvov's text is very figurative and emotional. The author uses a variety of means artistic expression: epithet (“a big-tongued fat man”), metaphor (“to pull her out of the abyss of despair”), gradation (“a pathetic, weak, uninteresting person”).

I completely share the author's point of view. We need to be careful when using words, because we can not only offend others, but also be misunderstood by them. Our words can be misinterpreted. Remember the famous lines of F.I. Tyutcheva:

We can't predict
How our word will respond,
And we are given sympathy,
How grace is given to us.

And it’s as if our young poetess A. Nebutova continues Tyutchev’s thought in the poem “Be careful with words.” She says here that “a word can kill a person.” How sometimes we regret the words that escaped us involuntarily and caused pain to another person!

L.N. thought the same. Tolstoy, who wrote: “The word is a great thing. Great because with a word you can unite people, with a word you can separate them, with a word you can serve love, but with a word you can serve enmity and hatred. Beware of such a word that divides people.”

Thus, let us be attentive and careful in handling the word, let us be careful in dealing with our loved ones, friends, and people around us.

Text for an essay on the topic of thoughtless use of words, tactlessness

Wounds from words are caused not only by rudeness, but often by thoughtless handling of words. I myself suffered from this once in my life. As a child, I was fat and remained that way. As adults I can easily bear this, but when I was a schoolboy I was teased and I suffered terribly. It took a lot of endurance and the ability to stand up for oneself to stop teasing. And so we, a group of schoolchildren, were invited to the editorial office of a large newspaper by a famous writer. They gave us tea and treated us to cakes. The writer talked to us about school. I was getting ready to write an essay. I answered his questions too. The essay appeared. I unfolded the newspaper and felt cold: he, indicating my first and last name and school, called me in the essay “the tongue-tied fat man Seryozha!” Is there much joy in the fact that he praised my answers? He made me famous all over the country as a big-tongued fat man! It was said aptly, no matter how much I fought back, nothing helped, this new nickname stuck to me for a long time. There was only one answer: “That’s what they published in the newspaper!” So that’s how it is.”

Many years later. We met with this writer in a holiday home. We talked and I asked him:

Do you know what grief you once caused me?

He was terribly surprised.

I told him this story. He said:

Forgot: Excuse me!

An adult, I excused him, but as a boy I hated him. Children are especially sensitive to words, especially vulnerable. Parents, teachers, journalists writing about children, doctors, do not forget about this.

This incident happened in one family. A daughter, a fifth-grade schoolgirl, who had recently suffered a serious long-term illness, returned home one day pale and said:

I won't go to this school again.

She didn't explain anything. All you could see was that she was immensely shocked.

Better to die than to go to this school.

The parents decided to transfer the girl to a nearby school. And only years later she told what was the matter. During a medical examination in the presence of her friends, the school doctor exclaimed sympathetically:

You can't live with such a heart!

Her friends bombarded the girl with questions. She dressed silently and silently left the school. I left, never to return there again. She didn’t say anything to anyone, so as not to upset anyone close to her. She believed her elders and thought that she was living in her last weeks.

This wound was inflicted with a word not by anger, not by rudeness, but by stupidity and ignorance.

The weaver girl stuttered badly from childhood and suffered greatly from it. Her life was not easy. She described her story in a story where she portrayed herself under a different name. She had a naive dream: the story would be published, people would read it, recognize her in the heroine and understand how unfair they were to her. And her life will change. She sent the story to a literary consultation. The employee who read the manuscript was apparently in a hurry, or perhaps did not know his job well. Only he did not notice that the cover letter said: the story is autobiographical. And he wrote to the author: you brought out a pathetic, weak, uninteresting person as the main character.

It seemed to him that he was writing a review of a story, but he wrote a review about the life of a girl who already considered herself useless to anyone. His cruel response - not out of ill will, but out of inattention and mental dullness - put the girl in the hospital for a long time. And when my editorial comrades and I set out to pull her out of the abyss of despair, it turned out to be not easy!

Be careful with your words! It can seriously hurt!

IN modern world very often you can meet people who behave rudely, swear with absolutely no reason, simply because they are used to it. In this text, S. L. Lvov raises the problem of politeness.

The author tells us several stories from life different people who were faced with the fact that they were insulted or wounded by a word, perhaps not on purpose: “Wounds from a word are caused not only by rudeness, but also by thoughtless handling of words.

The narrator spoke on the radio on the topic “Caution - the word!”, He “advised to use the word thoughtfully.” Most listeners agreed with him, but some believed that rudeness was absolutely necessary.

I completely agree with S. L. Lvov and believe that the question of the need for politeness should not even be raised. There is already so much anger and aggression in the world, so why do we need more of it?

The problem being discussed is so

It is important that many writers raised it in their works, for example, S. Dovlatov in the article “This untranslatable word is “rudeness.” He is sure that rudeness is rudeness and impudence, multiplied by impunity. It is necessary to give a worthy rebuff to this.

In D.I. Fonvizin’s comedy “The Minor” this problem can also be traced. Mrs. Prostakova punishes the servants with or without reason, treating them very rudely. Her favorite expressions: “cattle”, “thief”, “blockhead”. This behavior of mother influenced Mitrofanushka, and he also became arrogant and rude.

Thus, the problem of politeness has been relevant since ancient times to this day. Let everyone think about their behavior, and then there will be more kindness in the world around them.


Other works on this topic:

  1. Publicist S. L. Lvov in his text examines the problem of words in detail. He suggests thinking about how you use a word, how it can affect...
  2. Sometimes one single word, thrown by us in a fit of anger, makes our interlocutor vulnerable, withdrawn, unsettled. That is why S. L. Lvov, the famous publicist,...
  3. Politeness is very important quality person. This is his ability to express respect and acceptance of other people. Politeness shows the level of culture and self-esteem of a person. Always...
  4. Each person has his own interests, tastes and preferences, and understanding them can be difficult. Sometimes people, for various reasons, cannot find mutual language. In this...
  5. This short statement opens up an amazing scope for thought: “The mental wound inflicted will sooner or later heal, but the scar on the heart will remain” (Neyah). Sergey Lvov raises such...
  6. Satire is a literary device that writers have always resorted to to ridicule the vices of people and society. Comedies are usually classified as satire, but...
  7. Goal: To form respectful relationships with people and be able to build these relationships. Pedagogical goal: Using game elements to develop the classroom team. Objective: Development of students' communication abilities...