Macedonian A Course for Beginning and Intermediate Students English and Macedonian Edition by Christina E. Kramer – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 978-0274726790, 0274726793
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 0274726793
ISBN 13: 978-0274726790
Author: Christina E. Kramer
Macedonian, the official language of the Republic of Macedonia, is spoken by two and a half million people in the Balkans, North America, Australia, and other émigré communities around the world. Christina E. Kramer’s award-winning textbook provides a basic introduction to the language. Students will learn to speak, read, write, and understand Macedonian while discussing family, work, recreation, music, food, health, housing, travel, and other topics.
Intended to cover one year of intensive study, this third edition updates the vocabulary, adds material to help students appreciate the underlying structure of the language, and offers a wide variety of new, proficiency-based readings and exercises to boost knowledge of Macedonian history, culture, literature, folklore, and traditions.
Winner, Best Contribution to Language Pedagogy, American Association of Teachers of Slavic and Eastern European Languages
Table of contents:
1. Macedonian Pronunciation and the Macedonian Alphabet
1.1 The Macedonian alphabet
1.2 Notes on the alphabet and pronunciation
1.3 Stress (accent)
1.4 Cognates
1.5 Alphabetical order
1.6 Writing Macedonian
2. Introductions and Occupations
2.1 Subject pronouns
2.2 Present tense of verbs, introduction
2.3 Present tense of the verb ‘to be’
2.4 Gender of nouns
2.5 Interrogatives
2.6 Conjunctions
3. Actions and Attributes
3.1 Plural of masculine and feminine nouns
3.2 Adjectives
3.3 Plural of adjectives
3.4 Present tense of verbs
3.5 Negation of verbs
3.6 months
3.7 Numbers 0-20
4. Daily Routines
4.1 Adverbs
4.2 Plural of neuter nouns
4.3 Quantitative plural
4.4 Demonstrative adjectives
4.5 Definite articles
4.6 Definite direct objects and clitics
4.7 Possession
4.8 Conjunctions
5. Food
5.1 Definiteness of adjective plus noun phrases
5.2 Direct object pronouns
5.3 Prepositions with personal pronouns
5.4 Introduction to дa constructions
5.5 The invariant verb може in да constructions seeking permission
5.6 to vs. on
5.7 Forms of ‘whose’
5.8 Conjunctions и и, или или, ни ни
6. Music
6.1 Indirect objects
6.2 Indirect and direct object clitics
6.3 Uses of на
6.4 Verbal aspect
6.5 Future constructions
6.6 Future tense of сум
6.7 Subordination with дека
6.8 Relative clauses, introduction
7. Cities, Giving Directions, Skopje, Free Time
7.1 Comparatives and superlatives
7.2 Possessive pronominal adjectives
7.3 Embedded questions and indirect questions
7.4 Imperatives
7.5 Auxiliary verb треба
7.6 Numbers 0-100
7.7 Telling time, introduction
8. Education, Invitations
8.1 Aorist, introduction
8.2 Days of the week
8.3 Telling time, continued
8.4 Review of subordinate clauses
8.5 Relative clauses, continued
8.6 Intransitive verbs with ce
9. Vacations, Birthdays, and Other Celebrations
9.1 Aorist, continued
9.2 Verbal nouns, introduction
9.3 Hundreds, thousands, millions, billions
9.4 Numbers designating male human beings and mixed gender groups
9.5 Months of the year
9.6 Ordinal numbers
9.7 Dates
9.8 Verbs of liking
9.9 Order of clitics, review
9.10 Diminutives, introduction
9.11 Vocative
10. Weather
10.1 Imperfect
10.2 Proximate and distance forms of the definite article
10.3 Interrogatives, pronominal adjectives, and adverbs of quantity and quality
10.4 Impersonal constructions
10.5 Imperatives, continued: да and нека constructions
11. Appearance, Character
11.1 Colors, clothing, relatives
11.2 Expectative conditionals
11.3 Perfective imperfect and future-in-the-past
11.4 Indirect speech, introduction
11.5 Verbal nouns, continued
11.6 Verbal adverbs
11.7 Word formation
12. Health
12.1 Verbal l-forms and formation of the l-past
12.2 Approximate numbers
12.3 The emphatic verb нејќе
12.4 Compound conjunctions: без да, за да, пред да
12.5 The conjunction штом
12.6 The verbal prefix no- and the verbs of ‘lying, ‘sitting,’ ‘standing’
12.7 Aorist, continued
12.8 Reflexive verbs
13. Housing
13.1 Comparisons continued and the prefix npe-
13.2 Hypothetical constructions with би
13.3 Overview of conditionals
13.4 Admirative and dubitative
13.5 Indirect speech, continued
13.6 Suppositional or reported forms of perfective imperfect constructions
13.7 The use of треба with nominal subject
13.8 Optionals
14. Geography of Macedonia, Travel
14.1 Verbal adjectives
14.2 Word order
14.3 Passive constructions with ce
14.4 Conjunctions дури (да, не), додека (да, не)
15. Wedding Customs, Sports, Arts
15.1 Imá perfect
15.2 Dependent form of masculine personal names
15.3 Aspect distinctions and imperfective derivation
15.4 Introduction to verbal prefixes
15.5 Prefixes for ‘some’, ‘no-‘, ‘every-‘, e.g. ‘someone, no one, everyone’
15.6 Indefinite pronouns meaning ‘any-‘, e.g. ‘anyone, anywhere’
15.7 The conjunction како да, ‘as if’
16. Cultural Sites in Macedonia
16.1 Pluperfects
16.2 Constructions with имал plus verbal adjective
16.3 Diminutives, continued
16.4 Review of prepositions
16.5 Collective plurals
16.6 Suffixes in word formation
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