B.A DEGREE COURSE IN ENGLISH
I SEMESTER |
CREDIT
|
INTERNAL
|
EXTERNAL
|
MAXIMUM
|
HOURS
|
Language
|
3
|
25
|
75
|
100
|
6
|
English
|
3
|
25
|
75
|
100
|
6
|
Core Subjects- Paper-I
Elizabethan Age
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4
|
25
|
75
|
100
|
5
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Core Subjects- Paper – II
Milton and the Neo-Classical Age
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4
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25
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75
|
100
|
5
|
Allied- Paper – I - An Introduction to the
Social History of England
|
5
|
25
|
75
|
100
|
6
|
Non-Tamil Students:
(VI Std.) Tamil
Tamil Students : Non-Major Elective
|
2
|
||||
Skill Based Subject
(soft skill)
|
2
|
2
|
II SEMESTER |
CREDIT
|
INTERNAL
|
EXTERNAL
|
MAXIMUM
|
HOURS
|
Language
|
3
|
25
|
75
|
100
|
6
|
English
|
3
|
25
|
75
|
100
|
6
|
Core Subjects- Paper-III
The Romantic Age
|
4
|
25
|
75
|
100
|
5
|
Core Subjects- Paper – IV
The Victorian Age
|
4
|
25
|
75
|
100
|
5
|
Allied- Paper – I - An
Introduction to the Literary Forms
|
5
|
25
|
75
|
100
|
6
|
Non-Tamil Students:
(VI Std.) Tamil
Tamil Students : Non-Major Elective
|
2
|
||||
Skill Based Subject
|
2
|
2
|
THIRD SEMESTER
Course
Components
|
Subjects
|
Inst. hrs
|
Credits
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Exam Hours
|
MAXIMUM MARKS
|
||
Ext. Marks
|
Int. Marks
|
Total
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|||||
Part I
|
Languages -Paper III
|
3
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Part II
|
English - Paper III
|
3
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Part III Core Course
|
Paper-V- Twentieth Century Paper I – Prose and Drama
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4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Core Subject-
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Paper – VI - Modern English Grammar and Usage
|
4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Allied
Subject
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Paper III - History of English Literature –
1500 - 1798
|
5
|
3
|
75
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25
|
100
|
|
Part IV
2.Soft Skill III
|
3
|
60
|
40
|
100
|
|||
3. Environmental
Studies
|
Examination will be
held in IV semester
|
FOURTH SEMESTER
Course
Components
|
Subjects
|
Inst. hrs
|
Credits
|
Exam Hours
|
MAXIMUM MARKS
|
||
Ext. Marks
|
Int. Marks
|
Total
|
|||||
Part I
|
Languages -Paper IV
|
3
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Part II
|
English - Paper IV
|
3
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Part III
Core Course
|
Paper-VII – Twentieth Century Paper I –
Poetry and Fiction
|
4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Core Subject-
|
Paper – VIII - History
of English Language
|
4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Allied
Subject
|
Paper IV - History
of English Literature – 1798
- Present Day
|
5
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Part IV
2.Soft Skill IV
|
3
|
60
|
40
|
100
|
|||
3. Environmental
Studies
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
FIFTH SEMESTER
Course
Components
|
Subjects
|
Inst. hrs
|
Credits
|
Exam Hours
|
MAXIMUM MARKS
|
||
Ext.
|
Int.
|
Total
|
|||||
Part III Core
Courses
|
Paper - IX - Shakespeare
I
|
4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Paper - X - Indian Writing in English
|
4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
||
Paper-XI- American
Literature I - Prose and Drama
|
4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
||
Paper – XII – An Introduction
to General
Linguistics and
Communication
|
4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
||
Project or Electives
|
Elective Paper –
I -
Post
Colonial Literatures in English
|
5
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Part IV
Value Education
|
SIXTH SEMESTER
Course
Components
|
Subjects
|
Inst. hrs
|
Credits
|
Exam
Hours
|
MAXIMUM MARKS
|
||
Ext.
|
Int.
|
Total
|
|||||
Part III Core
Courses
|
Paper - XIII – Shakespeare II
|
4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Paper - XIV - American Literature II –
Poetry and Fiction
|
4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
||
Paper- XV – English Phonetics and Phonology
|
4
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
||
Project/
Electives
|
Elective Paper II - Indian Literatures in Translation
|
5
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
|
Elective Paper III – Journalism
|
5
|
3
|
75
|
25
|
100
|
||
Part V
Extension Activities
|
SEMESTER - I
Core Course
- Paper I – Elizabethan
Age ( Credits
4 )
Unit I
Prose - Essays of Bacon
1.
Of Delay0
2.
Of Wisdom for a
Man’s Self
3.
Of Friendship
4.
Of Expense
( Bacon’s
Essays - Emerald Publications)
Unit II
Poetry
- Sir Thomas Wyatt - The long love
- Michel Drayton - Tell me, thou skilful shepherd’s swain
- Sir Philip Sidney - Desire, though thou my old companion art
Unit
III Poetry
1
Edmund Spenser - The doubt which ye misdeem
2
Shakespeare - Sonnet 116 – Let me not to the marriage
3.
John Donne - Batter My Heart
( An Anthology of Elizabethan Poetry
edited by Sukanta Chaudhuri – Oxford
Publications
Five Centuries of Poetry ed. C. N. Ramachandran , Macmillan)
Unit
IV Drama
- Christopher Marlowe - Edward II
Unit
V - Drama
2.
Ben Jonson - Everyman in His Humour
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SEMESTER - I
Core Course
Paper-II – Milton and the Neo Classical Age
(
Credits 4 )
Unit
I Prose
1. Addison - Character of Will Wimble
2. Steele - Roger’s Account of his Disappointment
in Love
3. Goldsmith – Man in Black
4. Goldsmith – Beau Tibbs
Unit
II Poetry
1. Milton -- Paradise Lost -– Book IX
The Temptation of Eve ( Lines 411
- 835)
Unit
III Poetry
1
Andrew Marvel - To His Coy
mistress
2. Dryden –
Portrait of Achitophel (Absalom and Achitophel
Lines 150 -229)
3. Alexander
Pope - The Character of Atticus ( From
Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot)
( Five Centuries of Poetry ed. C. N. Ramachandran , Macmillan)
English Poetry: A kaleidoscope, University Press)
Unit
IV Drama
1. William Congreve – The Way of the World
Unit V
Fiction
1. John Bunyan – Pilgrim’s Progress ( first part only)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEMESTER - I
ALLIED PAPER 1
– An
Introduction to the Social History of England ( 5 Credits)
Unit
I - Tudor England
1 The Renaissance as a multi faced European
movement and its impact on England
2 The Reformation – the causes and its progress
through the reigns of Henry
VIII, Edward VI, Mary and Elizabeth
3 The dissolution of Monasteries - the
causes and consequences
Unit
II -
Stuart
England
1. The conflict between the monarchy and the
parliament and the establishment of
the supremacy of the parliament through the
reigns of James I, Charles I,
Charles II James II and the its culmination
in the Glorious Revolution,
2. Life in the Protectorate England and in the Restoration England
3. The Coffee Houses and their social relevance
Unit
III -The
Age of Revolutions
1. The
Industrial revolution
2. The
Agrarian Revolution
3. The impact of the French Revolution and the consequent war with France
Unit
IV
- The Victorian England and the Modern England
1. The
Humanitarian movements
2. The social,
political, material and intellectual changes in the Victorian England,
the
Reform bills, the spread of education
3. The social impact of the two World Wars, the
labour movement, Welfare State
Note
; Only a broad and extensive understanding of the major social and political
events that impacted the social life
and literature is aimed at.
Scope of study as in The Social History
of England - Prof. Xaviar.
SEMESTER - II
Core Course
- Paper III – The
Romantic Age ( Credits
4 )
Unit I
Prose
1. Charles
Lamb -- Christ’ s
Hospital Five and Thirty Years Ago
2. Charles
Lamb -- Dream Children – a Reverie
3. William
Hazlitt -- Common Sense
4. William
Hazlitt -- On the Ignorance of the Learned
( Essays of Elia, Selected Essays of William Hazlitt,
Macmillan)
Unit II
Poetry
1. Thomas
Gray -- Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
2. William
Blake -- The Tyger
3. William
Wordsworth -- Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern
Abbey
Unit III
Poetry
1
S. T. Coleridge
-- Kubla Khan
2
P. B. Shelley -- Ode to A Skylark
3
John Keats
-- Ode On A Grecian Urn
(Five Centuries of Poetry Ed. C.
N. Ramachandran , Macmillan)
Unit IV
Drama
1. R. B.Sheridan -- The School for Scandal
Unit
V - Fiction
1. Jane Austen -- Pride and Prejudice
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SEMESTER - II
Core Course
- Paper IV – The
Victorian Age ( Credits
4 )
Unit I
Prose
1 John
Ruskin - King’s Treasuries
Unit II
Poetry
1
Alfred Tennyson - The
Lotos - Eaters
2
Matthew Arnold -- Dover
Beach
Unit III
Poetry
1. Robert
Browning –
My Last Duchess: Ferrara
2. D. G. Rossetti -- The Blessed
Damozel
3. E. D. Browning -- How do I love thee?
( from Sonnets from the
Portuguese)
( Five Centuries of Poetry
ed. C. N. Ramachandran , Macmillan)
Unit
IV Drama
1. Oscar Wilde
-- The Importance of Being
Earnest
Unit
V Fiction
1. Emily Bronte - Wuthering
Heights
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SEMESTER - II
ALLIED PAPER
II – An
Introduction to the Literary Forms ( 5 Credits)
Unit
I - Poetry
1
Subjective Poetry – The Lyric, the Sonnet, the Elegy, the Ode
2. Narrative Poetry
- Ballad, Epic , Satire, Dramatic Monologue
Unit
II -
Prose
1
The Essay - Definition,
characteristics, development
Types - Personal and Impersonal
essay, the Aphoristic essay,
the
Periodical essay , the Reviewers
2. The short story, Autobiography,
Biography , Criticism
Unit III – Drama
1. Tragedy , Comedy –
Characteristics, Development, Types,
2. Melodrama, Farce, Masque
Unit IV – Novel
1.
The characteristics, development
2.
Types - The Picaresque Novel, the Historical Romances, the Gothic
Novel,
The Detective Novel, the Science fiction , the Stream of
Consciousness novel
Note
; Only a broad extensive knowledge is aimed at. Development study is of an over
–all nature and no focus on individual author is expected
Recommended books ;
Literary Terms – M. H, Abrams.
The typical Forms of English
Literature - A. H. Upham
Introduction to the Study of
Literature – W. H. Hudson
A Background to the Study of English
Literature – Birjadish Prasad
III SEMESTER
PAPER V – THE TWENTIETH CENTURY I ( Prose and Drama)
( Credits 4 )
Unit I Prose
I
a. George
Orwell – Shooting an Elephant
b. Alduous
Huxley – Selected Snobberies
c. Gardiner - On the Philosophy of Hats
Unit II Prose
II
4. Forster - What I Believe
5. Russell - The Limits of Human Power
6.
Churchill - The French Revolution
Reference
Essays of Orwell (
Macmillan)
Highlights of Modern English Prose –Ed. M. G. Nayar (
Macmillan)
Perspectives –Ed. Veloo ( Anu Chitra)
Unit III Drama
I
7. Bernard Shaw -
Arms and the Man
Unit IV Drama II
8. T. S. Eliot -
Murder in the Cathedral
Unit V One
– Act _Plays
9
Lady Gregory -
The Rising of the Moon
10. J. M. Synge - Riders to the Sea
Reference - Eight One Act Plays
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PAPER VI – MODERN
ENGLISH GRAMMAR AND USAGE (
Credits 4 )
Word Classes – Lexemes and Functors
Noun –Proper, Common, Count, Non count, Nominal Cases –
Functional Categories
of Noun - Subject,
Complement, Object and part of Prepositional Phrase
Pronoun
Verb, Weak and Strong Verbs, Transitive and Intransitive,
Verbal inflexions, -s, -ed, -en, -ing
Auxiliaries – Primary and
Secondary Modal
Time and Tense, Aspect, Tense usage,
‘Be’ ‘Have’ ‘Do’ as Main Verbs , Verbs of incomplete predication
Adjectives -
Kinds, Functions - Attributive
and Predicative, Degree of comparison, Order of adjectives
Adverbs - Formation,
Position of Adverbs, Comparison
of Adverbs, Sentence Adverb ,
Prepositions, Articles,
Phrases
Nominal Phrase, its structure – Modifier ( Determiner, Pre
determiner, Adjectival, Nominal, Numeral, Verbal, Intensifier, Possessive),
Qualifier ( Adverbal, Prepositional, Verbal, Clause) Head, Gerund
Verbal Phrases,
Verbal Patterns, Phrasal
Verbs
Analysis of VPs –
Finite - Present,
Past - Non – Finite –Infinitival - Participial – Present, Past
Adjectival and Adverbial Phrases
Prepositional Phrases
Clauses
Independent Clause,
Dependent Clause
- Nominal, Adjectival- Defining and Non Defining,, Adverbial
Simple, Compound and Complex sentences – Transformation - Co- Ordinating and Sub ordinating
Conjunctions
Conditional Clauses
Sentence
Types of sentence - Kernel Sentences - Basic
Sentence Patterns employing grammatical Categories and
Functional - Subject and Predicate –
Noun ( Subject, Object, Complement), Verb ( Transitiive, Intransitive) Adjunct
Transforms – Negative, Negative Contraction, Interrogatives
– Wh and Yes or No Questions, Tag
Questions
Active and Passive, Direct and Indirect
Interchange of Word classes
Common Errors
The aim of the paper is to give the students a firm
grounding in grammatical applications. The stress is more on practice then on
theorizing.
30 Marks – Theory (
Short questions only)
45 Marks - Exercises.
Suggested Books for reference
N. Krishnaswamy
- Modern English Grammar and
Usage ( Macmillan)
David Green -
Contemporary English Grammar Structures and Composition
(Macmillan)
Dr. Williams and Dr.
Saraswathy - A Handbook of English
Grammar with Usage and
Composition ( Anu Chitra)
F. T. Wood – A Remedial English Grammar for Foreign Students
Language and Linguistics – Wallwork ( Chapter V)
Stannard Allan -
Living English Structure
Thomson and Martinet
- A Practical English Grammar
Bhatnagar and Raju Bhargava – English for Competitive
Examinations
Allied- Paper – III - HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE – 1500 – 1798 . CREDITS
-5
General Guidelines
The scope of the paper is to help a student to develop a broad understanding of the ages, their
characteristics, major literary movements with reference to the major writers.
Essay questions on
individual authors to be avoided.
Unit I - Prose
Early Prose - More, Ascham,
Sidney, Lyly, Bacon,
The Authorized Version of the Bible
Beginnings of Modern English Prose -
Dryden, Addison, Steele, Goldsmith
Swift,
Johnson
Unit II - Poetry
14th
Century
- Chaucer, Langland, Gower
Elizabethan & Jacobean Poetry - Characteristics with reference to Spenser,
Shakespeare, Donne
Caroline Age & Milton -
Milton
Neo – Classical - Characteristics with reference to Dryden and Pope
Pre – Romantics - Characteristics with reference to Gray,
Blake,
Collins, Burns
Unit III - Drama
Early Drama - Liturgical drama, Mystery, Miracle,
Morality,
Interludes
Elizabethan & Jacobean Drama -
Characteristics with reference to
University wits,
Marlowe, Shakespeare, Jonson
Restoration
Drama -
Characteristics with reference to Congreve,
Wycherley
Sentimental
comedy - Characteristics with reference to
Addison, Kelly,
Cumberland
Anti – sentimental
comedy – Characteristics with reference to
Goldsmith,
Sheridan
Unit IV -
Novel
Early English
novel -
Elizabethan Romances, Bunyan
18th
Century Novel -
Defoe, Richardson, Fielding, Sterne, Smollet
Reference books
W. H. Hudson –An Outline
History of English Literature
Edward Albert- History of English Literature
Compton
Rickett – A History of English Literature
SEMESTER IV
PAPER VII – THE
TWENTIETH CENTURY II (Poetry and Fiction)
( Credits
4 )
Unit I
Poetry I
1. Hopkins –
Thou Art Indeed Just My Lord
2. Lawrence -
Snake
3 Yeats - Sailing to Byzantium
4. Wilfred Owen – Anthem for Doomed Youth
5. Auden - Refugee Blues
Unit II
Poetry II
6 Walter De La Mare – The Ghost
7. Eliot - Journey of the Magi
8. Larkin - Church Going
9. Ted Hughes -
Pike
10. Seamus Heaney –
Digging
Reference
20th
Century Verse - Ed., C. T.
Thomas ( Macmillan)
Viewless Wings –Ed.,
R. Viswanathan ( Indian Open University Books)
Ten Twentieth
Century Poets –Ed. Maurice Woolman ( Oxford)
Unit III
Novel I
11 Hardy - Tess of the D’urbevilles
Unit IV Novel
II
12. Somerset
Maugham - Moon and Six Pence
Unit V Short Story
13. Conan Doyle –
The Dying Detective
14. Maugham
- The Ant and the Grasshopper
15. Saki
- The Story Teller
16. A. J. Cronin –
Two Gentlemen of Verona
No plot question from Drama and
Novel to be asked in essay questions
PAPER VIII –
HISTORY OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE ( Credits 4 )
Unit I
Proto Indo European – Eastern and
Western Group of PIE – The descent of English from PIE – Common features of PIE
languages
English as a Germanic language –
Common features - Great consonant shift,
Verbal structure, Teutonic stress
Important landmarks in the
evolution of English - The reasons for the erection of the
landmarks
Unit II
Old English – Anglo Saxon invasion, Viking invasion, , Wessex
Dialect , Vocabulary , Spelling
and Pronunciation, Inflection,
Word Order, Gender, I Mutation and Vowel Gradation
Middle English - Norman
Invasion and the evolution of English, East Midland dialect, Vocabulary, Inflection, Word Order,
Spelling changes, Pronunciation, Gender
Modern English - The
evolution of Modern English,
Heterogeneous Vocabulary, Simplified Inflectional system, Rigid Word
Order, Periphrasis, Intonation,, Spelling and Pronunciation, Gender
Unit III
Foreign Influences -
Latin and Greek, French, Scandinavian
Unit IV
Word Makers -
Spenser, The translators of the Bible, Shakespeare, Milton
Unit V
The growth of dictionaries
Standard English ,
Received Pronunciation, Received
Standard, Modified Standard, Regional standard, The role of BBC , Concept of correctness
American English
English as a world Language, Basic English, Anglican
Reference
C. L. Wrenn – The English Language
T. Wood – An Outline History of
the English Language
Albert C. Baugh - A History of the English Language
Lalitha Ramamurthi -
A History of English Language and Elements of Phonetics
Allied- Paper – IV HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE
1798 – PRESENT DAY
CREDITS -5
The scope of the paper is to help a student to develop a broad understanding of the ages, their
characteristics, major literary movements with reference to the major writers.
Essay questions
on individual authors
to be avoided.
Unit I Prose
Romantic Age
- Lamb, Hazlitt, Dequincy
Victorian Age
– Carlyle, Ruskin, Arnold,
Macaulay
20th Century Age -
Orwell, Huxley, Gardiner, Lynd, Chesterton, Lucas
Unit II Poetry
Romantic Poetry
- Revolt and Revival – Characteristics with reference to
Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelly, Keats
Victorian Poetry -
General characteristics with particular reference to Tennyson,
Arnold, Browning, Rossetti, Morris, Swinburne
20th
Century - Hopkins,
Wilfred Owen. Siegfried Sassoon,
T. S. Eliot, Yeats
Auden, Spender, Macniece, Cecil
Day Lewis
Larkin,
Hughes, R.S Thomas, Thomas Gunn
Unit III Drama
Revival of Drama
– Revival of drama -
Oscar Wilde
20th Century -
Various dramatic movements with reference to Shaw,
T. S Eliot,
Synge, Galsworhty, Beckett, Brecht,
Osborne
Unit IV Novel
Romantic Age
- Radcliffe, Walpole, Jane Austen, Walter Scott
Victorian Age
– Dickens, Thackeray, George
Eliot, Bronte sisters, Stevenson,
Hardy
20th Century -
Conan Doyle, Wells, Lawrence, Orwell, Virginia
Woolf, Conrad,
Maugham,
Greene, Golding
Reference books
W. H. Hudson –An Outline History of English Literature
Edward Albert- History of English Literature
Compton
Rickett – A History of English Literature
V
SEMESTER
PAPER IX –
SHAKESPEARE I
( Credits 4 )
Unit I
Life and Works of Shakespeare
Unit II
Julius Caesar
Unit III
Romeo and Juliet
Unit IV
Taming of the Shrew
PAPER – X - INDIAN
WRITING IN ENGLISH
Unit I Prose I
1. Swami
Vivekananda - The Secret of Work
2. Jawaharlal
Nehru - Kamala
3. Nirad
Chaudhuri - Our Behaviour
4. Dom Moraes - My Mother
Unit II Poetry 1
5. Toru Dutt - Our Casuarina Tree
6. Sarojini
Naidu - Palanquin Bearers
7. Nissim
Ezekiel - Goodbye Party to Miss Pushpa T. S
8. R.
Parthasarathy - Under Another Sky
Unit III - Poetry II
9. Jayanta Mahapatra -
Hunger
10. Kamala Das - An Introduction
11. A.K.
Ramanujan - Small –Scale Reflections on a Great House
12.. Eunice De Souza
- Feeding the Poor at Christmas,
Varca 1942
Books for Refernece
An Anthology of Commonwealth Poetry – Ed., C. D.
Narasimhaiah
Twenty Five Indian Poets in English - Ed., K. S. Ramamurthy
Contemporary Indian Poetry in English -Ed. Saleem Peeradina
Unit IV Drama -1
13. Girish Karnad
- Nagamandala
Unit V - Novel
14. Raja Rao . - Kanthapura
PAPER - XI -
AMERICAN LITERATURE PAPER
I - Prose and Drama
Unit I Prose I
1. Emerson – The
American Scholar
2. Thoreau - Winter Animals
Unit II Prose II
3. Martin Luther King – I Have a Dream
4. Robert Frost –The Figure a Poem Makes
5. Alan Tate - The
Man of Letters in the Modern World
Books for Reference
American Literature – An Anthology of Prose – Ed., C.
Subbiah ( Emerald)
The World’s Great Speeches ( Oxford)
Unit III Drama I
6. Arthur Miller
– The Death of a Salesman
Unit IV Drama II
7. Tennessee
Williams - Streetcar Named Desire
Unit V Drama III
8. Lorraine Hansberry
– A Raisin in the Sun
PAPER XII – AN
INTRODUCTION TO GENERAL LINGUISTICS AND COMMUNICATION (
Credits 4 )
Unit I
General
What is Linguistics? – Linguistics as a science – Synchronic
and Diachronic approaches –Branches of study
Language
Definition – Uses
of language - Phatic communion
Properties of language– Species specific and species
uniform, Symbolic system, Arbitrariness, Duality of Structure, Productivity,
Displacement, Cultural Transmission, discreteness, Inter changeability, Specialization,
Non directionality
Origin of Language – Divine Source, Natural sound source,
Oral Gesture, Glasso Genetics
Unit II
Language
Development of Writing –Pictographic, Ideographic,
Locographic, Rebus Writing, Syllabic Writing, Alphabetic Writing
Language Variation – Dialect, Standard and Non –
Standard, Isoglasses , Dialect
Boundaries, Bilingual, Bidialectal, Idiolect, Register, Lingua Franca, Pidgin,
Creole,
The Post Creole Continum
Language Change – Protos – Family relationship - Cognates –
Comparative Reconstruction
Unit III
Grammar
What is Grammar ?
Misconceptions regarding grammar - The development of English grammar -
Objections of modern grammarians to traditional approach – Nominative Rules
- Latinate Fallacy – Logical Fallacy – -
Historical Fallacy – Descriptive and Prescriptive approaches – Concept of
correctness and social acceptability – Form and substance - Speech and Writing
Unit IV
Morphology, Syntax and Word Meaning
Word - Morphemes – Free Morphemes and bound
Morphemes – Prefix and suffix – Inflectional and Derivational – Allomorphs -
Zero morphemes – Morphological Study of words
Structural analysis – IC Analysis -
Labelled Tree diagram - Using IC
analysis to disambiguate simple sentences -
Deep and Surface Structure
Word Meaning, Association, connotation, collocation,
Semantic Field
Exercises
Morphological Analysis of words using tree diagram
IC analysis( simple sentences)
Use of IC analysis to
disambiguate simple sentences
Deep and surface structure
Reference
George Yule – The Study of Language ( Chapters 1, 2, 3, 8,9,10, 19,20)
Wallwork - Language
and Linguistics – (Chapters 1, 2, 6 ,7 )
Palmer – Grammar ( Chapter 1)
S.K Verma, N.Krishnaswamy
-Modern Linguistics – An Introduction
Dr. Varshney - An Introductory Text book of Linguistics and
Phonetics
Adrian Akmajian & others- Linguistics – An introduction to Language
and Communication
V SEMESTER - PAPER I – POST
–COLONIAL LITERATURES IN ENGLISH
(
Credits 5 )
Unit I
Introducing Post- Colonial Literatures – (British Colonization, Nationalism, Post-
Colonialism) – Invader and settler colonies,
Englishes, Commonwealth Literature, New Literatures
Unit 1I Prose
1. Margaret Atwood
- From Survival - A Thematic Guide to Canadian Literature
2. Chinua Achebe
- Novelist as Teacher
3. Ruth Prawar Jhabvale
- Myself in India
Unit III Poetry
4. A. D. Hope
- Australia
( Australia)
5. Allen Curnow -
House and Land ( New
Zealand)
6. Wole Soyinka
- Telephone Conversation (
African)
7. Dereck Walcott
- A Far Cry from Africa ( Caribbean)
8. James Reaney
- Maps ( Canada)
9. Kishwar Naheed
- I am Not that Woman (
Pakistani)
Unit IV Drama
10. Wole Soyinka
- The Lion and the Jewel
Unit V - Fiction
– Short Story
11. Nardine
Gordimer - Six Feet of the Country ( South Africa)
12. Henry Lawson -
The Drover’s Wife ( Australia)
13. Jeannette c. Armstrong
- This is a Story ( Canada)
14. Albert Wundt - A Resurrection ( New Zealand)
15. Jamaica
Kincaid - In the Night
( Caribbean )
Reference
The Arnold
Anthology of Post Colonial Literature in English Ed. John Thieme
Readings
in Commonwealth Literature - William Walsh
An Anthology of Commonwealth Poetry – Ed., C. D.
Narasimhaiah
VI SEMESTER
PAPER XIII
– SHAKESPEARE II (
Credits 4 )
Unit I
Elements of Shakespearean Theatre
Unit II
Macbeth
Unit III
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Unit IV
The Tempest
PAPER - XIV - AMERICAN
LITERATURE II – (Poetry and Fiction)
( Credits 4)
Unit I Poetry - I
1. Anne
Bradstreet – The Prologue
2. Emerson - Hamatreya
3. Poe - The Raven
4. Whitman - Song of Myself
Unit II
Poetry - II
5. Emily Dickinson - The
Soul Selects hers own Society,
Much
Madness is Divinest Sense
6. Robert Frost -
The Death of the Hired Man
7..Wallace
Stevens – Anecdote of the Jar
8..Theodore
Roethke - The Meadow Mouse
Unit III
Poetry - III
9.. A. Robinson –
Richard Cory, Reuben Bright
10. Sylvia Plath
– The Lady Lazarus
11. Amy Lowell
-- Patterns
12. Denise Levertove
– The Mutes
Reference Books
Four Centuries of American Poetry – Ed., Mohan Ramanan
American Literature – An Anthology of Poems – Ed., C.
Subbiah
Unit IV -Novel
-
13. Earnest Hemingway
– The Old man and the Sea
Unit V -Short
Stories
14. Mark Twain
- Luck
15. Hawthorne –
Young Goodman Brown
16. Poe
– Tell Tale Hearts
17. O’ Henry
- After Twenty Years
18. William Saroyan –
Locomotive 38, the Ojibway
Paper XV ENGLISH PHONETICS AND PHONOLOGY ( Credits 4)
Unit I
An Introduction to Phonetics and Phonology
The unphonetic character of English Orthography and the need
for a phonetic script
Air Stream Mechanisms
Organs of Speech
- Respiratory Region, Phonatory
Region and Articulatory Region
Phonemes - Minimal Pairs- Contrastive Distribution, Phonetic
Environment,
Allophones , Complementary distribution and Free Variation
Unit II
Description of Consonants – Air Stream Mechanism, Position
of the Vocal Cords, Position of the Soft Palate, Place of Articulation, Manner
of Articulation –Articulation of individual Consonants
Unit III
Description of Vowels – Pure vowels- Three Term label, Cardinal vowel , Vowel
Chart, Description of individual Vowels
Description of Semi vowels
Unit IV
Transcription, Narrow and Broad
Syllable, Syllabic division, Syllabic Structure, Consonant
clusters, Arresting and Releasing consonants
Supra segmental Phonemes
Stress - Word Stress, Sentence Stress, Rhythmic Stress
Intonation – Tone group, Tone syllable, Tone ( Static and
Kinetic)
Exercises - 30 marks for practical exercises
Marking Phonetic Environment, Identifying Phonemes through
Minimal Pair,
Allophonic Variation – Aspirated, Unexploded, Nasally
exploded, Phonetic Realization of Plural, Past, Third Person Singular
morphemes,
Syllabic division and structure
Transcription –
Simple words with stress ,
Sentences marking stressed and unstressed syllables
Reference books
1. Daniel
Jones- The Pronunciation of English
2. Balasubramanian.
T - A Textbook of English Phonetics for
Indian Students – A workbook .
3. R.
K. Bansal and J. B. Harrison – Spoken English.
4. Lalitha
Ramamurthi - A History of English
Language and Elements of Phonetics
5. T.
Balasubramanian - English Phonetics for Indian Students – A workbook
6. Exercises
in spoken English – Consonants, Vowels, Accent, Rhythm and Intonation - CIEFL
VI SEMESTER
- PAPER II - INDIAN LITERATURES IN TRANSLATION
( Credits 5)
Unit 1 Prose
1. M.K. Gandhi
- Stealing and Atonement
2. M.K. Gandhi
- Shyness, My Shield
(The
Story of My Experiments with Truth
3. Who is the Buddha
- An extract from Periyar on Buddhism
(
Critical Quest, New Delhi)
4. Buddhadev Bose - An
Extract from An Acre of Green Grass – A Review
of
Modern
Bengali Literature ( The Picador
Book of Modern
Indian
Literature Ed. Amit Chaudhuri)
Unit II Poetry
5. Rabindranath Tagore - Where the Mind is Without Fear ( Bengali)
6. Umashankar Joshi - Fragmented ( Gujarati)
7. Gopalakrishna Adiga - Do
Something, Brother( Kannada)
8. O.N.V. Kurup - Earthern Pots ( Malayalam)
9..A. Jayaprabha
- Stares ( Telugu)
10. From Kovattan, Kuruntokai 66 -
What his Girl Friend Said to Her ( Tamil)
11.Daya Pawar - Oh Great Poet ( Marathi)
Books for Reference
Texts and Their Worlds I Ed., Anna Kurien - Foundation Books
Twenty Five Indian Poets in English - Ed., K. S. Ramamurthy
Unit III Drama
12. Maheswari Devi - Rudali
Unit IV
13. Bama - Karukku
Unit V
14. Rabindranth Tagore
- The Posrtmaster
15. Ambai – A Kitchen in the Corner of the House
16. Lakshmi
Kannan - India Gate
17. Vaikom Muhammad Basheer – Birthday
Books for Reference
Texts and Their Worlds I Ed., Anna Kurien - Foundation Books
ELECTIVES
VI SEMESTER
- PAPER III - JOURNALISM ( Credits 5)
Unit I
What is Journalism?
A Short history of Journalism in India
Principles of
Journalism
Press Codes and Ethics of Journalism
The role played by journalism as part of the mass media
Unit II
Freedom of Press, Threats to Press Freedom
Government and the Press
Press Laws -
Defamation, Libel, contempt of Court, Copyright laws, Press Regulation Act,
Press Registration Act, Law of
Privileges
Unit III
The role of the Reporter, Sub Editor, Editor
News - News Reports
- Types - Straight, Interpretive,
Investigative, Scoop, Sting,
Reporting, Headlines, Editing, Editorial, Feature Writing,
Personal Column , Reviews, Interviews, Press conference
Reporting - News Values,
human interest, story angle, obituaries
-
Unit IV
Layout,- Aims –
Designing –Types - Advertisements –Types
–Advertising and social responsibility
Editing, Proof Reading
Photographic Journalism, Cartoon
News Agencies, , Press Council of India,
Exercises
Editing , Proof Reading , Feature Writing, News Reporting,
Planning interviews, Reviewss
Books for reference
1. Keval
Kumar - Mass Communication in India.
2. M.
V. Kamath - The Professional Journalist
3. Chalapathi
Rao - The Press
4. Sengupta
– Journalism as a Career
VALUE EDUCATION
Unit I : Value Education – its purpose and significance in
the present world – value system – the role of culture and civilization –
holistic living – balancing the outer and inner – body, mind and intellectual
level – duties and responsibilities
Unit II: Salient features for life – Truth, commitment,
honesty and integrity, forgiveness and love, empathy and ability to sacrifice,
care, unity, inclusiveness, self esteem and self confidence, punctuality –
time, task and resource management – problem solving and decision making skills
– interpersonal and intra personal relationship – team work – positive and
creative thinking
Unit III : Human rights – Universal declaration of Human
rights – Human rights violation – National integration – peace and nonviolence
– Dr.A.P.J, Kalam’s ten points for enlightened citizenship – social values and
welfare of the citizen – the role of media in value building
Unit IV – Environment and Ecological balance – interdependence
of all beings – living and nonliving. The binding of man and nature –
environment conservation and enrichment.
Unit V: Social Evils – corruption, cyber crime, Terrorism – alcoholism,
drug addiction – dowry – domestic violence – untouchability – female infanticide
– atrocities against women and how to tackle them.
Question Paper Pattern
Major
Papers
Section A
10
short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x2 = 20
Questions
1, 2 & 3 – Unit I
Questions
4 & 5 – Unit II
Questions
6 & 7 – Unit III
Questions
8, 9 – Unit IV
Questions
10, 11 & 12 – Unit V
Section B
Five Paragraph answers – 200 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
Questions 13, 14
– Unit I
Question 15 –
Unit II
Question 16 –
Unit III
Questions 17, 18
– Unit IV
Question 19 –
Unit V
Section C
3 essays
– 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 –
Marks – 3 x10 = 30
Question 20 –
Unit I
Question 21 –
Unit II
Question 22
– SUnit III
Question 23 –
Unit IV
Question 24 –
Unit V
Allied Papers
Section A
! 0 short Answers – 50
words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks
– 10 x2 = 20
Three questions from each of the four units
Section B
Five Paragraph answers – 150 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
A minimum of one unit from each of the four units
Section c
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
A minimum of one unit from each of the four units
QUESTION PAPER PATTERN
CORE COURSES
Paper V THE
TWENTIETH CENTURY I ( Prose and Drama)
Section A
10 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x 2 = 20
Questions 1, 2
& 3 – Unit I
( Prose I)
Questions 4, 5
& 6 – Unit II
( Prose II)
Questions 7 &
8 –
Unit III ( Arms and the Man )
Questions 9 &
10 – Unit IV
(Murder in the Cathedral)
Question, 11 – Unit V
(The Rising of the Moon)
Question, 12 - Unit V
( Riders to the Sea)
Section B
Five Paragraph
answers – 200 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
Questions 13, 14
& 15 – Unit I, Unit II ( Prose)
Question 16 ,17
& 18 – Unit III,
Unit IV ( Drama)
Question 19 – Unit V
( One Act Playa)
Section C
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
One question from each unit
PAPER VI – MODERN ENGLISH GRAMMAR AND USAGE
Short questions – 10 out of 12 ( 30 marks)
Grammar exercises – 45 marks
Model Question
Paper
Time – 3 Hrs
Max 75 Marks
Section
A ( 30 Marks)
Answer any Ten of the following in 100 words each ( 10 x
3 =30 marks)
1.
What are the basic sentence patterns? Explain
2.
What are the functional categories of noun?
3.
Write a short note on finite and non – finite forms of
verb.
4.
What are the different functions of adverb?
5.
Explain the predicative and attributive functions of
adjective.
6.
‘ He did not like my interference’- Generate a minimum
of six transforms of this kernel sentence.
7.
Write a short note on phrasal verb.
8.
What is the structure of a nominal phrase?
9.
Distinguish between clause and phrase.
10.
Write a short note on the definite and indefinite
article
11.
Describe the
process of transformation of active into passive.
12.
What functions
do the subordinate clauses perform?
Section
B(45 Marks)
1. Mark the
nominal phrases, state their function and analyze their structure 2
Marks
a The
Police identified the man whom they wanted.
b He
was a serious contender for the post
2.. Write the
functional analysis of the following. 3 Marks
a. . I could not
deny him permission.
b. It was a painful blow
c. Such students should not be encouraged
d. . In anger I
called him a cheat.
e . I do regret my outburst
f. . He presented me a costly pen
3. Analyse the
verbal phrases in terms of finite/ non finite 2
Marks
a. He
will come tomorrow
b. He
came yesterday
c. He
was coming
d. He
has come.
4 Undeline the
subordinate clauses and state their function
and change them into Phrases
3 Marks
a.
I know why he was angry with me.
b. I
visited the hospital where I was born
c. Whether
he will be selected is doubtful
5.. Change the
underlined phrases into clauses 3
Marks
a. Despite
working hard, he failed.
b. On seeing the
Principal, I ran away
c. His annoyance came as no surprise
6. Correct the following
sentences, if necessary 4 Marks
a. Having failed in my practicals,
the examiner asked me to try again
b. I cannot understand why is
acting this way
c. Better to wait till we hear
from him
d. I will meet him when he will
come
e. He is a best friend of mine
f.
He gave me five hundred rupee note
g
Each of you have to bear the burden
h. I congratulated him for his
success
7. Fill in the blanks with suitable tense
forms given in the brackets 4 Marks
a. The cat --- ( sit) in front of the photo since tea
time
b.
On my way to work I generally – (
meet) many children who – ( go) to school
c.
If I ---- you I would not attend the party.
d.
When I --- ( come) to work , the peon
--- ( sleep) in my chair.
e.
I --- ( lose) my pen. Please help
me to find it.
f. They ----( land) in Bombay by the time
tomorrow
8. Replace the underlined words with
suitable phrasal verbs
2 Marks
a The
meeting was cancelled
b. The fire
personnel struggled hard to extinguish the fire
c. Despite my
ploeasa he refused to grant my request
d The management refused to yield to the
demands of the
unions
9. Complete the
senntences using the appropriate degree of
comparison 2 Marks
a.
No one in my class is ------ ( bad) your class leader
b. This is
---- ( fine) of the four paintings
c.
Platinum is --- ( valuable) any other metal
d.
This is ---- ( kind) gesture I
have seen
10. Fill in the blanks with suitable
prepositions and adverbial
Particles
3 Marks
a. He hasn’t been here --- Monday
b. There is a knock – the door. Who can
be calling --- us --- this
late hour?
c. You can reach the station -- bus
-- ten minutes
11. Fill in the blanks with suitable articles,
wherever necessary
3 Marks
a.
India is - member of
- commonwealth
b.
– English are proud of - English
c. I think it is – honourable settlement
d. We cannot live without – apple
- day
e. He is
- salesman of - merit
12. Change
the voice 3 Marks
a. They are sending letters of
thanks to all their friends
b. Poverty
drove him to desperation
c. Nobody has
ever taken me for an Indian
13. Change
into reported speech 3 Marks
a. Rram asked me, “ Can you tell me why you look so
disturbed?”
b “ Is there
a direct train to Varanasi?”,
the passenger
asked the booking clerk
14. Complete
the following sentences 3
Marks
a. We would have gone -------
b. The
question was too difficult
-----
c. No sooner had he come -------
15. Change the
following sentences into their corresponding
negatives and questions
2 Marks
a. I found the story
unbelievable
b. My mother has an imported umbrella
16. Use the following in
sentences of your own, as noun, verb and
adjective
3 Marks
Success,
Consideration
PAPER VII –
THE TWENTIETH CENTURY II
(Poetry and Fiction)
Time 3 Hrs Max. 75 Marks
Section A (20 Marks)
10 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x 2 = 20
Questions 1, 2
& 3 – Unit I
( Poetry I )
Questions 4, 5
& 6 – Unit II
( Poetry II)
Questions 7 &
8 – Unit III
(Tess of the D’urbevilles)
Questions 9 &
10 – Unit IV
(Moon and Six Pence)
Questions , 11 &
12 – Unit V
(Short Story)
Section B ( 25 Marks)
Five Paragraph
answers – 200 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
Questions 13, 14
& 15 – Unit I, Unit II ( Poetry I & !!)
Question 16 ,17
& 18 – Unit III,
Unit IV ( novel I & II )
Question 19 – Unit V
(Short Story)
Section C ( 30 Marks)
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
One question from each unit
Paper VIII – HISTORY OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE
Time 3 Hrs Max. 75 Marks
Section A ( 20 Marks)
1 0 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x2 = 20
Minimum of TWO questions from each unit
Section
B ( 25 Marks)
Five Paragraph answers – 150 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
A minimum of ONE
question from each unit
Section
C ( 30 Marks)
3 essays
– 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 –
Marks – 3 x10 = 30
ONE question from each
unit
PAPER
IX – SHAKESPEARE PAPER
I ( Credits 4 )
Time 3 Hrs Max. 75 Marks
Section
A ( 20 Marks)
10 short Answers –
50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 –
Marks – 10 x2 = 20
Questions 1, 2 –
Life and Works of Shakespeare
Questions 3 - 6
- Julius Caesar
Questions 7 - 9
– Romeo and Juliet
Questions 10 -
12 – Taming of the Shrew
Section
B ( 25 Marks)
Five Paragraph
answers – 200 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
Questions 13 - Life and Works of Shakespeare
Questions 14, 15 –
Julius Caesar
Question 16
,17, – Romeo and Juliet
Question 18,
19 – Taming of the Shrew
Section C ( 30 Marks)
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
Question 20 ,21 –
Julius Caesar
Question 22,23 –
Romeo and Juliet
Question 24 – Taming of the Shrew
Paper X INDIAN
WRITING IN ENGLISH
Time 3 Hrs Max. 75 Marks
Section A (20 Marks)
10 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x 2 = 20
A minimum of two questions from each unit
Section B ( 25 Marks)
Five Paragraph answers
– 200 words each - Choice 5 out
of 7 – Marks – 5 x 5 = 25
A minimum of
one question from each unit
Section C ( 30 Marks)
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
One question from each unit
PAPER XI -
AMERICAN LITERATURE PAPER I -
Prose and Drama
Time 3 Hrs Max. 75 Marks
Section A (20 Marks)
10 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x 2 = 20
A minimum of two questions from each unit
Section B ( 25 Marks)
Five Paragraph
answers – 200 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x 5 = 25
A minimum of
one question from each unit
Section C ( 30 Marks)
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
One question from each unit
PAPER XII - AN INTRODUCTION
TO GENERAL LINGUISTICS AND COMMUNICATION POST
Time 3 Hrs Max.
75 Marks
Section A ( 20 Marks)
10 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x2 = 20
Three questions from each of the
four units
Section B ( 25
Marks)
Five Paragraph answers – 150 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
A minimum of one question from
each of the four units
Section C ( 30
Marks)
3 essays
– 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 –
Marks – 3 x10 = 30
A minimum of one question from each of the four units
PAPER - XIII -
SHAKESPEARE II ( Credits
4 )
Time 3 Hrs Max. 75 Marks
Section A
10 short Answers –
50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 –
Marks – 10 x2 = 20
Questions 1, 2 –
Elements of Shakespearean Theatre
Questions 3 - 6
– Macbeth
Questions 7 - 9
- A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Questions 10 -
12 –
The Tempest
Section B
Five Paragraph
answers – 200 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
Questions 13, -
Elements of Shakespearean Theatre
Questions 14, 15 –
Macbeth
Question 16
,17, – A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Question 18,
19 – The Tempest
Section A
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
Question 20 ,21 – Macbeth
Question 22,23 –
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Question 24 – The Tempest
PAPER XIV -
AMERICAN LITERATURE II -
Poetry and Fiction
Time 3 Hrs
Max. 75 Marks
Section A (20 Marks)
10 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x 2 = 20
Questions 1, 2
& 3 – Unit I
( Poetry I )
Questions 4, 5
& 6 – Unit II
( Poetry II)
Questions 7 8 & 9 –
Unit III ( Poetry III)
Questions 10 &
11 – Unit IV
(The Old Man and the Sea)
Questions , 12 – Unit V
(Short Story)
Section B ( 25 Marks)
Five Paragraph
answers – 200 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
Questions 13, 14
& 15 – Unit I, Unit II, Unit III
Question 16
,17 – Unit IV
Question 18 &
19 – Unit V
Section C ( 30 Marks)
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
One question from each unit
PAPER XV
ENGLISH PHONETICS AND
PHONOLOGY
Model Question Paper
Section A
20 Marks)
Answer Ten of the
following each in about 50 Words ( 5 x
2 Marks)
- Define Phonetics? What are the branches of Phonetics? Distinguish it from Phonology
- What is meant by air stream mechanism? Describe briefly the possible air stream mechanisms.
- Distinguish between a Voiced and a Voiceless sound.
- What is the role of lips in the articulation of consoanats?
- What are the two types of transcription? Explain with examples.
- Why is a semi vowel so called?
- How is a palato alveolar sound produced? What are the palato alveolar sounds in English?
- What is a syllabic consonant?
- ‘ I gave a book to Mary’- By altering tonic syllables what are the different shades of meaning that can be communicated?
- Distinguish between Dark l and Clear L.
- Explain rhythmic stress.
- What is contrastive distribution? How is it different from complementary distribution?
Section B (25 Marks
Answer Five
of the following ( 5 x 5 =25 Marks
- Using the three term label describe the consonants underlined?
Laugh Part Badge Sing Told
- Identify the vowels in the following words and mark them in a vowel chart. Give
three term label.
Tree World
Cart Foot Chat
15. Transcribe the following, marking the stress
Food , Aim ,
Earn, Agree , Tourist, marriage, church, Judge
Basket, Cotton
16. Transcribe
the following sentences marking the stress
I don’t know why John doesn’t speak to me at all.
Good morning Sheela, how do you feel today?
Sorry dear, if you need any help,
you are free to tell me what you want.
Can you tell me where the post office
is?.
For long I have not written any
letter to my father
17. State
how the plural/ first Person singular/ Past morphemes are phonetically
realized? Give reason
Dogs, Wanted , Laughed ,
Bottles , Misses
18. Distinguish
the following pairs of phonemes through minimal pairs.
/ I:
/ and
/ e /
/ s /
and /z /
/n
/ and
/ m /
/f
/ and /v /
/ l
/ and
/g /
19 Describe
the syllabic structure of the following words
Street, Ugly, Simple,
Cotton , Ash
20. Attempt
an orthographic representation of the following phonetic script
Section C (30 Marks)
Answer Three
of the following ( 3 x 10 = 30 Marks
21. Describe the
vocal organs.
22. Classify
consonants according to the place of articulation.
23. Describe the
features of a vowel sound. Describe the English vowels, marking
them in a
vowel chart.
24. Write on
syllable and syllabic structure
25. What are the
tones? What are the factors to be considered in deciding the tones?
ALLIED PAPERS
Question Paper
Pattern
Paper III HISTORY OF ENGLISH
LITERATURE – 1500 – 1798
Section A ( 20 Marks)
10 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x2 = 20
Three questions from each of the
four units
Section B ( 25
Marks)
Five Paragraph answers – 150 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
A minimum of one question from
each of the four units
Section
C ( 30 Marks)
3 essays
– 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 –
Marks – 3 x10 = 30
A minimum of one question from each of the four units
Paper – IV - HISTORY
OF ENGLISH LITERATURE 1798 – PRESENT DAY
Section A ( 20 Marks)
! 0 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x2 = 20
Three questions from each of the
four units
Section B ( 25 Marks)
Five Paragraph answers – 150 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
A minimum of one unit from each of
the four units
Section C ( Marks 30)
3 essays
– 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 –
Marks – 3 x10 = 30
A minimum of one unit from each of
the four units
ELECTIVES
Question Paper Pattern
Paper I – POST
–COLONIAL LITERARURES IN ENGLISH
Time 3 Hrs Max. 75 Marks
Section A (20 Marks)
10 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x 2 = 20
Questions 1, 2
& 3 – Unit I
( Introduction )
Questions 4, 5 – Unit II
( Prose)
Questions 6, 7
& 8 – Unit III
( Poetry)
Questions 9 &
10 – Unit IV
( Drama)
Questions , 11 &
12 – Unit V
( Fiction)
Section B ( 25 Marks)
Five Paragraph
answers – 200 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
Question 13, - Unit I
( Introduction)
Questions 14 - Unit II
( Prose)
Questions 15 &
16 - Unit III
( Poetry)
Question 17 &
18 – Unit IV
( Drama)
Question 19 – Unit V
(Fiction)
Section C ( 30 Marks)
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
No question from Unit I
A minimum of One Question from units II to V
ELECTIVES -
PAPER II - INDIAN LITERATURES IN
TRANSLATION
Question Paper Pattern
Time 3 Hrs Max. 75 Marks
Section A (20 Marks)
10 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x 2 = 20
Questions 1 ,
2 – Unit I
( Prose )
Questions 3,, 4 ,
5, 6 –
Unit II ( Poetry )
Questions 7, 8 – Unit III
( Drama)
Questions
9,10 – Unit IV
( Fiction)
Questions , 11,
12 – Unit V
(Short Story)
Section B ( 25 Marks)
Five Paragraph
answers – 200 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
Questions 13, – Unit I,
Question 14,
15 – Unit II
Question 16, – Unit III
Questions 17,
18 - Unit IV
Question 19 - Unit V
Section C ( 30 Marks)
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
One question from each unit
ELECTIVES -
PAPER III - JOURNALISM
Question Paper Pattern
Section A ( 20 Marks)
! 0 short Answers – 50 words each - Choice 10 out of 12 – Marks – 10 x2 = 20
Three questions from each of the
four units
Section
B ( 25 Marks)
Five Paragraph answers – 150 words each - Choice 5 out of 7 – Marks – 5 x5 = 25
A minimum of one unit from each of
the four units
Practical exercises to be asked in
this section
Section
C ( Marks 30)
3 essays – 300 words each - Choice 3 -5 – Marks – 3 x10 = 30
One question from each unit.
Nice post.
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ReplyDeleteI need general English syllabus 2015
ReplyDelete