Thursday, March 19, 2020

Death Of A Salesman, American Dream essays

Death Of A Salesman, American Dream essays After reading Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, I notice a major difference can be noticed between my vision of the American dream, and the Loman familys vision of the American dream. To mean the American dream is to decided on your own what you want to do for a living when you are older, and how you want to go about getting there. There are many roads you can take to get to your goals. You can go to college if you desire to, or if your goals and standards are set lower, you can achieve them without college. The choice on how you want to live your own American dream is limitless in my eyes. In my opinion the Loman family has a terrible view of the American dream, and will never be able to achieve true success. The Loman family lives in more of a dream world than reality. They often sugar-coat their lives and make things seem much better than they are instead of actually facing lifes hardships and dealing with them. The entire Loman family does not see life for what it really is, they see life on how they wish it was. Instead of trying to gain their desired lifestyle, they pretend they already have it. Willy Lomans imagination is much larger than his sales skills, which leads to him getting pay cuts and eventually leads to him getting let go from his company. Willys sons Happy and Biff serve as clueless children who live through their fathers lies and false lifestyle. Willys wife Linda serves as a loyal wife who stands by her husband and lives in his dream world. Through out the play I believe Arthur Miller shows many examples of the American dream, but none of them are of the nuclear Loman family. In the beginning of the story a boy named Bernard (neighbor) states that Biff needs to study with him today for the Regents exam that their class would be taking next week. Bernard also stated the results will determine who gets college scholarship. After hearing this Willy...

Tuesday, March 3, 2020

An Introduction to French Register

An Introduction to French Register Register refers to the level of formality of a given word, expression, grammatical structure, gesture, or means of pronunciation. In French, there are six registers, listed here from most to least formal. 1. Literary/Refined - Littà ©raire/Soutenu Literary French is an extremely formal and elegant language which is nearly always written. When spoken, it tends to be for effect and sounds snobbish or old-fashioned. Poetic French is a subcategory. 2. Formal - Formel Formal French is polite language, both written and spoken. It is used when the speaker doesnt know, wishes to show respect for, or wants to demonstrate distance/coldness toward another person. 3. Normal - Normal The normal register is the largest and most common category of language, what you might call everyday language. Normal French has no particular distinction (neither formal nor informal) and is the language used by and between just about everyone. It includes various subcategories of specialized and technical language, such as administrative, judicial, and scientific jargons. 4. Informal - Familier Informal French expresses closeness and is typically used between friends and family. Baby talk and most apocopes are informal. Although informal French is grammatically correct, it is at the bottom end of what the French call bon usage (correct usage). 5. Familiar - Populaire Familiar French is used between friends and expresses closeness verging on disrespect. Verlan and largonji are subcategories, though their individual words can range from a normal register to slang. 6. Slang (Vulgar)  - Argot (Vulgaire) Slang is vulgar, offensive, and usually insulting language, often related to sex, drugs, or violence. It may be used between friends or enemies. The familiar and vulgar registers are considered non-standard French.