1.which phonetic stylistic device is based on repetition of consonant sounds
in successive words or syllables?
a) euphony
b) assonance
c) onomatopoeia
d) alliteration
what is this?
2.this is a combination of speech sounds which aims at imitating sounds
produced in nature, by things, by people, by animals.
a) onomatopoeia
b) assonance
c) alliteration
d) euphony
3.all the phonetic stylistic devices and expressive means are usually created by
of the given text.
a) reader
b) painter
c) critic
d) author
4.what is a graphon?
a) graphical fixation of phonetic peculiarities of pronunciation which violate
the accepted norms of spelling
b) phonetic stylistic device and expressive means
c) grammatic stylistic device
d) the mark used to separate the items in a list or to shoe where is a slight
pause in a sentence
5.what is alliteration?
a) the selection and arrangement of words in a text
b) a combination of speech sounds which aims at imitating sounds produced
in nature, by people
c) the repetition of consonant sounds in successive words or syllables
d) the repetition of vowels
what is this?
is a repetition of identical or similar sounds or sound
combinations at the end of successive lines.
a) rhythm
b) assonance
c) rhyme
d) alliteration
7.where does the emphatic use of punctuation and deliberate changes in the
spelling of a word belong?
a) phonetic stylistic devices and expressive means
1. The year 1189 was the starting point of the British legal system. It is from this moment that judicial precedents take on the form of a real legal source, and the whole structure as a whole becomes generally binding,
2. English common law at all times influenced the legal structures of other states. It should be noted that Britain has long been one of the largest colonial powers. Thus, English law in its primary form was in effect in many of its subjects.
3. The English legal system comprises a large number of branches. By analogy with continental legal structures, industries regulate public relations of one kind or another. Moreover, each of them has a number of its own specific features.
4. There are other legal branches in the British system, for example: constitutional law; administrative law; labor industry, etc. Most of all controversy in scientific circles is the English civil law.
5. At the same time in Great Britain there is no traditional division of the legal system into private and public law in general. But civil society relations are, of course, regulated.