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Scientific Prose Style

Scientific prose style

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A short description of SPS and it's characteristics

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Page 1: Scientific prose style

Scientific Prose Style

Page 2: Scientific prose style

Plan

• 1. The main functions of SPS• 2. The main characteristics of SPS• 3.The most frequent words used in

scientific text• 4. The characteristic features of a

sentence in SPS• 5. The constructions used in scientific

prose style

Page 3: Scientific prose style

The main function

to provide factual and precise information, which must be clear, concise, unambiguous and explicit

The target audience is a relatively small group of professionals who are well acquainted with the issue in question

There is no space for any redundant, repetitive and unimportant information

Page 4: Scientific prose style

The main Characteristics

The tone - formal, impersonal and

objective

Introduction/background, argument,

conclusion and bibliography

text isorganized into

chapters, sections and subsections

Text should be supported by

references

Text is written in the third person

Page 5: Scientific prose style

The first 100 most frequent words of this style

Prepositions• of, to, in, for, with, on, at, by, from,

out, about, down;

Notional words people, time, two, like, man, made, years.

Pronouns• one, it, we, they

Page 6: Scientific prose style

Prepositional phrases• in terms of; in view of, in

spite of, in common with, on behalf of, as a result of; by means of, on the ground of, in case of;

Conjunctional phrases: • in order that, in case that, in

spite of the fact that, on the ground that, for fear that;

Page 7: Scientific prose style

The main purpose

• A huge amount of connectors shows that the main purpose of the scientific prose texts is the logical sequence of utterances with clear indication of their interrelations and interdependence

Page 8: Scientific prose style

Characteristic features of the sentence

1.

•Mostly declarative sentences are used.

2.

•The simple sentence is longer than the main clause and the subordinate clause is the shortest one

3.

•It is also typical that the sentence consists of 4 clauses and more.

Page 9: Scientific prose style

Some constructions used in the scientific texts

Impersonal passive constructions• ‘it should be pointed out that…; it

has been pointed out that…; it has previously been shown that….’

Causative constructions• ‘this makes the problem easy; this

renders the metal hard; safety valves allow the metal to cool slowly’

Page 10: Scientific prose style

Some constructions used in the scientific texts

Formulas• ‘it is possible, necessary, essential

to do sth; it is likely, evident, obviuos that; it is/has been/can be/will be/should be proved/shown/realized’

Connectors• ‘thus, however, therefore,

furthermore, nevertheless, consequently…..; in fact, in short, in general, in this way, in other words’

Page 11: Scientific prose style

Some constructions used in the scientific texts

Subordinating conjunctions, referential pronouns, demonstrative pronouns /hierarchy/.

Page 12: Scientific prose style

The scientific prose style contains both written and spoken utterances:

•essays, articles, textbooks, scientific studies;

Primarily written:

•presentations, discussions, conferences

Spoken:

•no feedback, no situational context, no paralinguistic features.

Monologue:

Page 13: Scientific prose style

Conclusion

• 1. Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.

• 2. Never use a long word where a short one will do.

• 3. If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.

Page 14: Scientific prose style

• 4. Never use the passive where you can use the active.

• 5. Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.

• 6. Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous

Page 15: Scientific prose style

References

• Biber, D. et al. (1999). Longman grammar of spoken and written English.Harrow: Longman.

• Carol, S. & Gregory, M. (1978). Language varieties and their social contexts. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

• Goumovskaya, G. Scientific prose style. Retrieved April7, 2012, from http://eng.1september.ru/2007/16/8.html.

• Halliday, M. A. K., McIntosh, A. & Strevens, P. (1964). The lingustic sciences and language teaching. London: Longman

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