Azərbaycan dili üçün lüğətlərdən nisbi temporal lokallaşdırma funksiyasına ma-
lik olan aşağıdakı sözlər seçilmişdir:
Leksik mənasında ÖNCƏGƏLMƏ olan sözlər:
İsim: arxaizm, avans, başlanğıc, başlanılma, başlanış, dün, dünən, düngün, ərəfə,
əzəl, əzəlilik, əzəliyyət, ilkinlik, müqəddimə
Sifət: arxaik, bayaqkı, əvvəlinci, əvvəlki, əzəli, əzəlki, ilkin, inişilki, irəlidəki, irə-
liki, qabaqdakı, qabaqkı, məktəbəqədər, tarixəqədərki
Zərf: axşamayaxın, axşamqabağı, bayaq, bayaqdan, bayramqabağı, bildir, çox-
dan, erkən, ertə (tez, qabaq, əvvəl), ertədən, əqdəm, əvvəl, əvvəlcə, əvvəlcədən, əvvəl-
dən, əvvəli, əvvəllər, əvvəllərdə, əvvəlləri, əzəllər, əzəlcə, ibtidada, ibtidadan, inişil, irə-
li, irəlicə, irəlicədən, irəlidə, qabaq, qabaqca, qabaqcadan, onda (keçmişdə) öncə, öndən,
sübhəyaxın,
Qoşma: əvvəl, qədər, müqəddəm, -dak (-dək), -can (-cən), kimi,
Ara söz: Əvvəla, əvvələn,
Leksik mənasında EYNİZAMANLILIQ olan sözlər:
İsim: birvaxtlılıq, eynivaxtlılıq, eynizamanlılıq, əsrdaş, həməsr, həmyaş, həm-
yaşlıq, həmyaşıd, həmyaşıdlıq, həmzaman, indilik, müasir, müasirlik, nəsil, sinxroniya,
sinxronizm, sinxronluq, sinxronlaşdırma
Sifət: buaykı, bugünkü, builki, çağdaş, eynivaxtlı, eyniyaşlı, eynizamanlı, hazırkı,
həmvaxt, həmyaş, həmyaşıd, indiki, müasir, mövcud, sinxron
Zərf: İndi, indilik, indicə, indilikdə, indilikcə, vaxtında, vaxtlı-vaxtında, dərhal,
əlüstü, hazırda, hələ (ki), hələlik
Fel: yaşamaq, var olmaq, mövcud olmaq müasirləşdirilmək, müasirləşdirmək,
müasirləşmək, sinxronlaşdırmaq
Bağlama: ikən
Leksik mənasında SONRAGƏLMƏ olan sözlər:
İsim: axır, axırzaman, axirət, geclik, mabəd, postimpressionizm, postmodernizm,
son
Sifət: növbəti, postsovet, postmodernist, sonralıq,
Zərf: axırda, ertə (hazırkı gündən sonra gələn), gec, gecdən, gecdən-gec, gec-gec,
həftəsonu, nəhayət, nəhayətdə, nəticədə, onda (indi yox, o zaman), sonra, sonradan, son-
radan-sonraya, sonralar, sonralıqca, sonrası, tezliklə, yaxında, yaxınlarda
Qoşma: bəri, sonra, doğru,
Ara söz: nəhayət, axırda, ikincisi, saniyən
İngilis dili üçün lüğətlərdən nisbi temporal lokallaşdırma funksiyasına malik
olan aşağıdakı sözlər seçilmişdir:
Leksik mənasında ÖNCƏGƏLMƏ olan sözlər:
İsim: Antecedent, antecedence, antedate, anteriority, anticipation, eve, ex,
forenoon, forerunner, foreplay, prearrangement, precondition, precaution preface, pre-
judice, precedent, pre-election, prevention
Sifət: Antenatal, anterior, early, foregoing, past, precedent pre-classical, precon-
scious, pre-election, pre-dynastic, pre-Columbian, pre-human, preliminary, premature,
predictable, premier, previous, prior, primary
Fel: Foreordain, prearrange, predict, pre-elect, preoccupy, prepay, prepossess, pre-
suppose, preview, prevent, predetermine, predestine
Zərf: Afore, aforetime, already, anteriorly, before, beforehand, ago, early, former-
ly, lately, latterly, previously, recently, yesterday, once
Filologiya məsələləri – №02, 2016
36
Sözönü: Afore, before, ere, till, by, until
Bağlayıcı: before, since, till, until, when
Leksik mənasında EYNİZAMANLILIQ olan sözlər:
İsim: Attendant, coexistence, coincidence, concomitance, concourse, contempo-
rary, coeducation, contemporaneity, modernity, modernization, simultaneity, simultane-
ousness, synchronism, synchronization
Sifət: Attendant, coexistent, coexisting, co-extensive, coeval, coincident, concur-
rent, contemporary, contemporaneous, simultaneous, synchronous
Zərf: Coincidently, meantime, meanwhile, (at) once “ at the same time”, still, yet
Fel: Accompany, attend, concur, modernize, synchronize
Sözönü: At, in, on, over, upon, with, during
Bağlayıcı: As, no sooner … than, when, whenever, while
Leksik mənasında SONRAGƏLMƏ olan sözlər:
İsim: Aftercare, aftereffect, aftergrass, afterlife, afterimage, aftershave, after-
shock, posteriority, posterity, post-graduate, post-impressionism, sequence,
subsequence
Sifət: After, consecutive, conesquent, posterior, post-classic, post-graduate, post-
war, subsequent, successive, ulterior, belated, coming, late, latter, next
Zərf: After, afterwards, immediately, instantly, lastly, late, next, nextly, pro-
spectively, subsequently, successively,
Fel: Defer, delay, postdate postpone
Sözönü: After, following, on, past, since
Bağlayıcı: After, as soon as, directly, immediately
Müqayisə edilən hər iki dildə nəzərdən keçirilmiş leksik vahidlərin lüğət təhlili
göstərir ki, nisbi temporal lokallaşdırma funksiyası müxtəlif leksik vahidlərdə müxtəlif
cür təzahür edir.
Hər iki dildə tədqiq edilən temporal leksik vahidlərin semantik strukturunda ikili
məna çaları vardır. Onlardan biri «hərəkət, hadisə, proses və ya işin adı»dır və o özünü
söz köklərində (kök-morfemlərdə) göstərir. Digər çalar isə «aidlik, nisbət, əlaqələndir-
mə» çalarıdır. O da özünü mürəkkəb sözlərin ikinci komponentində büruzə verir.
Qeyd etmək lazımdır ki, post- önşəkilçisi Azərbaycan dilində hələ tam vətəndaşlıq
hüququ qazanmamışdır. Son dövrlərdə Qərbi Avropa dillərindən bizim dilimizə keçən
sözlərin tərkibində özünü göstərən bu şəkilçinin hələlik Azərbaycan mənşəli sözlərlə
birləşərək söz yaratması müşahidə olunmur. Sonragəlmə mənası ...sonrakı komponenti-
nin iştirak etdiyi mürəkkəb sözlərdə özünü göstərir. Mürəkkəb sözlərdə ...qabağı, ...ön-
cəsi,...qədərki komponentləri öncəgəlmə mənası yaradır.
Bu sahədə ingilis dilində önşəkilçilər üstünlük təşkil edir. İngilis dilində nisbi
temporal lokallaşdırma funksiyalı sözyaratma vasitələrinə after-, ante-, fore-, co- (con-,
com-), post-, pre- önşəkilçilərini nümunə göstərmək olar. Onlardan ante-, fore-, pre- ön-
şəkilçiləri öncəgəlmə, co- (con-, com-) önşəkilçisi eynizamanlılıq, after-, post- önşəkil-
çiləri isə sonragəlmə ifadə edir.
Faktik dil materialının araşdırılması göstərir ki, temporal leksikanın reallaşdırdığı
semantik funksiyalar ayrı-ayrılıqda deyil, nitqdə yalnız mütləq temporal lokallaşdırma
funksiyası ilə birlikdə reallaşa bilir.
Filologiya məsələləri – №02, 2015
37
ƏDƏBİYYAT
1. Axundov A. Fəlsəfi və qrammatik zaman kateqoriyaları // Ağamusa Axundov. Dil
və Ədəbiyyat. I cild
2. Axundov A. Azərbaycan dilinin izahlı lüğəti. Bakı, 2005.
3. Azərbaycan dilinin izahlı lüğəti. II c., Bakı, 1999.
4. Azərbaycan dilinin izahlı lüğəti. III c., Bakı, 2000.
5. Бондарко А.В. Функциональная грамматика.Л., Наука, 1984.
6. 6.Cambridge Advanced Learner’s Dictionary. Cambridge University Press, 2003.
7. Hornby A.S. Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary of Current English, Vol. I-II, 1982.
8. Милейковская Г.М. О соотношении объективного и грамматического времени
// Вопросы языкознания. 1956, № 5.
9. The Oxford English Dictionary, Volume X1, T-U, Oxford, At the Clarendon Press.
ГЮЛЬНАР АХУНДОВА
СЕМАНТИЧЕСКИЕ ФУНКЦИИ СЛОВА ОБОЗНАЧАЮЩИЕ ВРЕМЯ
РЕЗЮМЕ
В статье на материале азербайджанского и английского языка
анализированы семантические функции слова обозначающие время. Различные
языковые средства выражения темпоральности представляют собой не случайный
набор изолированных единиц, а систему взаимозависимых и взаимодействующих
средств. Эти средства объединяются на основе общности и взаимодействия их
семантических
функции.
Общность
семантических
функции
означает
принадлежность семантических элементов к определенной семантической зоне.
Все семантические функции обладают общим значением «временная координата»
и служат для реализации функции временной локализации. Общая функция
временной локализации включает в себя ряд специальных семантических
функций: 1) функция абсолютный темпоральной локализации; 2) функция
относительной темпоральной локализации;
GULNAR AKHUNDOVA
THE SEMANTIC FUNCTIONS OF WORDS EXPRESSING OF TIME
SUMMARY
This article deals, on the material of the Azerbaijani and English languages, with
the semantic functions of words expressing of time . The different linguistic means of
expression of temporality are not a casual set of disconnected, incoherent units, but a
system of the organic and associated means. These expression means combine on the
basis of commonness and interrelationship of their semantic functions. The
commonness of semantic functions means belonging of semantic elements, expressed
by various language means, to a definite semantic zone. All constituents of the field of
temporality have a common meaning of ‘time dating’ (‘time coordinate’) and serve for
the realization of the function of time localization. The common semantic function of
time localization includes a number of special semantic functions as 1) the absolute
temporal localization; 2) the relative temporal localization.
Rəyçi: İlham Tahirov, fil.e.d., professor
Filologiya məsələləri – №02, 2016
38
f.e.n., SEVİL ƏLİYEVA
ADNSU
sevil.aliyeva.72@mail.ru
DEVELOPING THE SKILL OF ASKING AND ANSWERING QUESTIONS
Açar sözlər: sual, cavab, bacarıq, inkişaf etdirmək, dil, müəllim, tələbə, ünsiyyət
Key words: question, answer, skill, to develop, language, teacher, student,
communication
Ключевые слова: вопрос, ответ, умение, развивать, язык, преподаватель,
студент, коммуникация
A daily activity in every classroom is the asking and answering of questions.
There are many purposes for asking questions including, the following: to actively
engage the students in the lesson, to create interest in the topic and to develop the
students’ critical thinking abilities. Unfortunately, teachers are sometimes unaware of
the most beneficial approaches to implementing this activity, and that the techniques
that they do employ might, in fact, be inhibiting student participation and learning.
Teachers ask questions for several purposes, and for that reason, they may
formulate their questions in various ways. There are many ways of categorizing
questions, and we will review several approaches in this article.
The simplest way to distinguish between types of questions is the difference
between display questions and referential questions. A display question is a question for
which for which the answer is obvious; for example, what is this colour? Alternatively,
how many arms do I have? The purpose of a display question is to allow the student to
show that they know and can express the answer in the target language. A referential
question, on the other hand, poses a problem for which the answer is not obvious and
may be unknown to the teacher and student alike. The purpose of this type of question
is to discover the unknown information.
a)
Refocusing questions are used when learners are off-task or in a transition to a
new topic,
b)
Clarifying questions are used if the learner’s answer was not clear, if the
teacher is looking for a different answer or if the teacher wants the answer expressed
differently,
c)
Verifying questions are used to elicit more detail and clarification,
d)
Narrow the focus questions are used to refocus answers within a narrower
framework; that is, to restrict the content of the answers,
e)
Supporting questions are used to assist students in establishing connections
and relationships between concepts.
Teachers should consider preparing some questions in advance. This would
benefit the students since it would ensure that various types of questions with differing
levels of difficulty and complexity would be explored. It is advisable to keep Bloom’s
Taxonomy in mind when preparing questions. This would oblige the teacher to
consider the type of information they are seeking to elicit with the question.
Two types of wait time are apparent in a classroom setting. One type of wait time
is the time between asking a question and getting an answer from a student. The second
type of wait time concerns the length of time that the teacher allows to pass after a
student stops speaking before the teacher speaks up, again. Some studies have shown
that the average wait time allowed by teachers is less than a second, which does not
Filologiya məsələləri – №02, 2015
39
allow much opportunity for students to internalize the discussion. A wait time of 3 to 5
seconds has been found to result in higher student performance standards. Waiting
those extra few seconds can produce several other positive outcomes including, the
following:
a)
Improved student retention,
b)
Increased length of student responses,
c)
More unsolicited student responses,
d)
Increased contributions by students who normally would not with a wait time
of under 3 seconds, and;
e)
Fewer student interruptions.
In addition to evaluating their techniques of posing questions, teachers should also
actively assess their techniques of answering questions, as well. Teachers should
consider whether to answer questions directly, indirectly or not answer the question at
all and redirect it to someone else.
As we can see the process of posing and answering questions, whether by the
teacher or by the students, is of critical importance in the language classroom. All
students need to be made to feel comfortable asking questions, even if the answer has
already been covered. The teacher must acknowledge the value of each question.
Students should be given plenty of opportunity to ask questions, so that they do not
need to be constantly interrupting the class to ask something. All of these considerations
may be facilitated if the teacher provides an opportunity for the student to ask questions
at regular intervals. By demonstrating the necessary patience to indulge students’
curiosity, a teacher will create a “question-friendly” environment, and this would go a
long way toward creating a “student-friendly” classroom.
Question forming is often difficult for foreign language speakers due to the
mandatory word order inversion in English questions. This is especially true for Spanish
speaking students, where word order inversion is uncommon. In each question, students
are presented with a group of words. The object is to put these words in the correct
order to form a syntactically correct question. Practice involves rewriting sentences.
Below you will find our forming questions worksheets. On these worksheets,
students learn common question formats. These worksheets work especially well with
English as second language students because English differs from many other languages
in regards to interrogative structure.
Interested in using interactive versions of our worksheets? Want to use a study
tool which automatically scores your work and allows you to review your mistakes?
Have fun and help preserve the environment at the same time. As we know learning a
language is done on mainly three levels:
1)
beginning
2)
intermediate
3)
advanced
Answering questions by students is changed, i.e. is from simple to complex
according to these levels. For example:
Beginning Level
Beginning Forming Questions Worksheet - Who?
Beginning Forming Questions Worksheet - What?
Beginning Forming Questions Worksheet - When?
Beginning Forming Questions Worksheet - Where?
Beginning Forming Questions Worksheet - Why?
Beginning Forming Questions Worksheet - How?
Filologiya məsələləri – №02, 2016
40
Beginning Forming Questions Worksheet - To be?
Beginning Forming Questions Worksheet - To do?
Intermediate Level
Intermediate Forming Questions Worksheet - Who?
Intermediate Forming Questions Worksheet - What?
Intermediate Forming Questions Worksheet - When?
Intermediate Forming Questions Worksheet - Where?
Intermediate Forming Questions Worksheet - Why?
Intermediate Forming Questions Worksheet - How?
Intermediate Forming Questions Worksheet - To be?
Intermediate Forming Questions Worksheet - To do?
Advanced Level
Advanced Forming Questions Worksheet - Who?
Advanced Forming Questions Worksheet - What?
Advanced Forming Questions Worksheet - When?
Advanced Forming Questions Worksheet - Where?
Advanced Forming Questions Worksheet - Why?
Advanced Forming Questions Worksheet - How?
Advanced Forming Questions Worksheet - To be?
Advanced Forming Questions Worksheet - To do?
The first step in asking better questions is to identify the types of questions we are
currently asking, why we are asking them, and finally, what techniques can we utilize to
improve the questioning that occurs in our classrooms. Questions help teachers fulfill
multiple agendas in the classroom. Questions are used to help teachers ascertain the
level at which their students understand (or misunderstand) concepts presented during
lecture, they are used to engage or encourage students’ active participation in a lesson,
they are used to allow students to express their thoughts and hear explanations offered
by their peers, and they are used to keep students alert or on task during class time.
Focusing on why questions are asked leads us to ask the deeper question of how
questions are being asked. When we look within the broader context of classroom
interaction, how questions are asked has a tremendous impact on learner outcomes.
These outcomes are shaped not just by how the instructor phrases and uses questions,
but are also shaped by the ways in which students are encouraged to generate their own
questions. How questions are asked and answered have broader implications than
mastering content. Effective instructors “model the process of inquiry and organizing
the search for solutions for their students”. Teach Talk, a newsletter for educators
dedicated to promoting best practices in the classroom, suggests that successful
questioners utilize several skills when crafting and asking good questions. These
include: phrasing and sequencing questions effectively, responding to questions so that
class time is used efficiently, keeping questions from leading to digression (unless the 7
digression is useful), and using the right tone and delivery both when asking and
responding to question.
Techniques for Successful Questioning
1. Phrasing; teacher communicates the question so that the students understand the
response expectation (i.e.: no run-on questions).
2. Adaptation; teacher adapts the question being asked to fit the language and
ability level of the students.
3. Sequencing; teacher asks the questions in a patterned order indicating a
purposeful questioning strategy.
Filologiya məsələləri – №02, 2015
41
4. Balance; teacher asks both convergent and divergent questions and balances the
time between the two types. The teacher uses questions at an appropriate level or levels
to achieve the objectives of the lesson.
5. Participation; teacher uses questions to stimulate a wide range of student
participation, encouraging responses from volunteering and non-volunteering students,
redirects initially asked questions to other students.
6. Probing; teacher probes initial student answers, and encourages students to
complete, clarify, expand or support their answers.
7. Wait Time (Think Time); teacher pauses three to five seconds after asking a
question to allow students time to think. The teacher also pauses after students’ initial
responses to questions in class.
8. Student Questions; teacher requires students to generate questions of their own.
The techniques listed above are straightforward points that most instructors are
familiar with. However, even though we know that these simple techniques make for
best practice in the classroom, many of us simply forget to employ them regularly. Most
often forgotten is the practice of “wait time.” Research shows that instructors wait
between .7 seconds and 1.4 seconds for pupils to respond to questions. Furthermore,
teachers will wait less than .7 seconds if they believe that their students might not know
the answer to the question posed. “Wait time” – or the time an instructor waits silently
between asking a question and expecting an answer – can impact the classroom
dynamic tremendously. Mary Bud Rowe first described the positive outcomes
associated with “wait time” in 1972. Rowe’s research indicated that when teacher
directed questions were followed by at least three seconds of undisturbed silent time for
students to formulate responses, the students answered the question more successfully.
Student success in formulating answers was not the only positive outcome observed
when “wait time” techniques were introduced to classrooms. Other researchers found
that regular use of “wait time” had positive impacts on both students and teacher
attitude and behaviors.
Student behaviors observed when increased “wait time” was introduced to the
classroom:
1. Decrease in “I don’t know” responses
2. Length and accuracy of answers increased
3. The number of volunteered, appropriate responses by larger number s of
students increased.
4. Achievement test scores rose. Teacher behaviors observed when increased
“wait time” was introduced to the classroom:
5. Questioning strategies became more flexible and varied.
6. The quantity of questions asked decreased, while the quality and variety of
questions increased.
7. Higher-order, divergent questions were asked more often.
In 1985, Stahl updated Rowe’s conception of “wait time” with the introduction of
“think time”. Stahl’s idea is based upon Rowe’s research, but goes a step further,
defining this time as a “distinct period of uninterrupted silence by the teacher and all
students so that they can both complete appropriate information processing tasks,
feelings, oral responses and actions” (Stahl, 1994). Stahl articulates his preference for
the term “think time over “wait time” in a 1990 article published by the Arizona State
University:
1. Think time names primary academic purpose and activity of the period of
silence thus allowing students and teachers to complete “on-task” thinking.
Filologiya məsələləri – №02, 2016
42
2. There are numerous places where periods of silence are as important as those
“wait time” periods reported in the literature.
3. There is at least one exception labeled “impact pause time” that allows for
periods of less that 3 seconds of uninterrupted silence.
Whether calling it “wait time” or “think time,” instituting breaks between the
questions and anticipated student responses proves to be a technique that makes
questions more powerful teaching tools. Questioning at post-secondary level few
students, even those at graduate levels are skilled at asking higher-cognitive questions in
class, and observations of college-level instructors reveal that even at the post-
secondary level, teachers are not modeling high level divergent questioning for their
students.
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