Acquisition of English Argument Patterns By Russian EFL Students

Acquisition of English Argument Patterns By Russian EFL Students

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Alexander Mikhailovich Amatov Doctor of Sciences in philology, Belgorod State National Research University, Belgorod, Russia
Arkadiy Petrovich Sedykh Doctor of Sciences in philology, Belgorod National Research University, Belgorod, Russia; Moscow International University, Moscow, Russia; Belgorod State Technological University named after V.G. Shoukhov, Belgorod, Russia
Tatyana Alexandrovna Sidorova Doctor of Sciences in philology, Northern (Arctic) Federal University, Arkhangelsk, Russia
Elena Evgenjevna Kotsova Doctor of Sciences in philology, Northern (Arctic) Federal University, Arkhangelsk, Russia
Elvira Nikolajevna Akimova Doctor of Sciences in philology, Pushkin State Russian Language Institute, Moscow, Russia
Konstantin Viktorovich Skvortsov PhD in Pedagogy, Associate Professor, Russian University of Transport, Moscow, Russian Federation
Resumen

Foreign (especially English) language learning has witnessed growing popularity in Russia over the last decades due to the enormous change in economic, political, legal, and cultural domains in the current period. The increasing need for good English speaking and writing skills put forward a demand for the accurate use of lexical items and grammatical structures by those who study English as a foreign language (EFL). Lexical and grammatical accuracy acquires a crucial importance in reasoning and argumentation. A slapdash word or syntactic construction in the argument structure may submit the listener to a conclusion, which is completely different from what the speaker implied. Such issues may be particularly frustrating in academic, legal, business, medical, and other types of institutional discourse. The rules of Aristotelian logic, underlying the good majority of reasoning structures, are generic. Therefore, it is a certain difference between the two languages, native (Russian) and foreign (English), that makes Russian students of English misinterprete logical chains and use irrelevant lexical items and grammatical constructions.

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