<SOURCE TABLE="ModernGreek:Arts::v3.135">
<SUBJECT ID="150-167" CODEUSED="150-167/267/367/467">
<TITLE>FORMAL MODERN GREEK</TITLE>
<AVAILABILITY>Not offered in 1996; expected to be offered in 1997.
<POINTS>18.75 1st year, 16.7 2nd, 3rd and 4th years
<COORDINATOR>Associate Professor E Gauntlett.
<PREREQUISITES>Intermediate Modern Greek B or Advanced Modern Greek 2 or equivalent.
<CONTACT>
<dl>
<dt><b>150-167:</b>
<dd>Up to six hours per week.
<dt><b>150-267/367/467:</b>
<dd>Up to three hours per week.
</dl>
<OBJECTIVES>Students on completion of the subject should be able to use formal Modern Greek with a high degree of grammatical correctness and observing the Greek conventions for various forms of formal discourse.
<CONTENT>The theory of difference in style and register; Greek conventions in formal communication (including reporting, technical description, public announcement, correspondence); relevant vocabulary and grammar. Students enrolled in 150-167 will also study the socio-cultural context and historical background to contemporary usage.
<ASSESSMENT>
<dl>
<dt><b>150-167:</b>
<dd>Regular written language work up to 2,000 words (30 per cent); one essay up to 2,000 words (25 per cent); and a 2-hour written examination (45 per cent).
<dt><b>150-267/367</b>:
<dd>Regular written language work up to 2750 words (40 per cent); mid-semester class test (30 minutes, 5 per cent); oral test (10 minutes, 5 per cent); and a 2-hour written examination (50 per cent).
<dt><b>150-467:</b>
<dd>Regular written language work up to 2,000 words and one project up to 2,000 words (70 per cent); and a 2-hour written examination (30 per cent).
</dl>
<PRESCRIBEDTEXTS>
<ATEXT>Vostantzoglou T <i>Analytikon orthografikon lexikon</i> Athens. Mackridge P <i>The Modern Greek Language</i> Oxford or Patakis.
<ATEXT><b>Only for 150-167:</b> Clogg R A Concise History of Greece CUP
</PRESCRIBEDTEXTS>
</SUBJECT>
</SOURCE>

<XREF TABLE="Greek:Ed-P:CODEAS150-167/267/367:v5.118">
<SUBJECT ID="150-167" CODEUSED="150-167/267/367">
<TITLE>FORMAL MODERN GREEK </TITLE>
<AVAILABILITY>Not offered in 1996; expected to be offered in 1997.
<POINTS>18.75 1st year, 16.7 2nd and 3rd year
<COORDINATOR>Associate Professor E Gauntlett.
<PREREQUISITES>Intermediate Modern Greek B or Advanced Modern Greek 2 or equivalent.
<CONTACT>
<dl>
<dt><b>150-167</b>
<dd>Up to six hours each week.
<dt><b>150-267/367</b>
<dd>Up to three hours each week.
</dl>
<OBJECTIVES>On completion of the subject students should be able to use formal Modern Greek with a high degree of grammatical correctness and observing the Greek conventions for various forms of formal discourse.
<CONTENT>The theory of difference in style and register; Greek conventions in formal communication (including reporting, technical description, public announcement, correspondence); relevant vocabulary and grammar. Students enrolled in <b>150-167</b> will also study the socio-cultural context and historical background to contemporary usage.
<ASSESSMENT>
<dl>
<dt><b>150-167</b>
<dd>Regular written language work up to 2,000 words (30 per cent); one essay up to 2,000 words (25 per cent); and a 2-hour written examination (45 per cent).
<dt><b>150-267/367</b>
<dd>Regular written language work up to 2750 words (40 per cent); mid-semester class test (30 minutes, 5 per cent); oral test (10 minutes, 5 per cent); and a 2-hour written examination (50 per cent).
</dl>
<PRESCRIBEDTEXTS>
<ATEXT>Vostantzoglou T <i>Analytikon orthografikon lexikon</i> Athens
<ATEXT>Mackridge P <i>The Modern Greek Language</i> Oxford or Patakis
<ATEXT><b>Only for 150-167:</b> Clogg R <i>A Concise History of Greece</i> CUP
</PRESCRIBEDTEXTS>
</SUBJECT>
</XREF>


