Dobro polzhalovat’! Welcome!
One of the Most Beautiful Languages on the Planet.
Final Class Overview.
Quiz, Test, Review, Orals, Final Exam.
12/2 - Review/Pushkin Poem.
12/4 - Review/ Recite Pushkin Poem.
12/6 - Orals.
Three to five minute oral will be completed in my office at Irby 415. See your translation worksheet for ideas of possible questions. There will be no class for that day. You must show up for your oral on time. If you do not, you will loose 10pts for your final exam. Here is the schedule for December 6:
Micah 10:00
Bilegdei 10:05
Li 10:10
Nicole 10:14
Natalie 10:20
Joshua 10:25
Jennifer 10:30
Sara 10:35
FINAL EXAM:
December 10 from 2 to 4 p.m. in Irby 310. Workbooks will be due the day of the exam. I will be correcting them while you take the exam and return them to you immediately.
The Final Exam will cover chapters 1-4. You will need to know the following:
- Numbers 1-1000
- Greetings/Making Acquaintances
- Clothing
- Pronouns (nom. and prep.)
- I have
- How do you say "this" in Russian
- Nouns and adjectives: Nom. Prep. and Acc. (in singular and plural)
- Possessive Pronouns (my, your, his, her, etc…)
- Nationalities (adjectives and nouns)
- Verbs (present and past tense)
- Questions words (kakaja)
- also
Bonus Points!
There is still time to gain a few extra bonus points! Go to the reading room and read about Alexander Blok! You will have until December 10th at 2:00 p.m. to answer the questions for the bonus points. This is just before your final exam. You could come to Irby about a half an hour earlier and answer the questions before the exam! January you can learn about Lermontov. Remember: You may not be enrolled in the Russian class next semester, but you can always check out the website and contribute also!
Here are the questions:
1. What did Blok argue in his poems?
2. What is considered Blok's masterpiece?
3. Why did Blok embrace the 1917 revolution?
4. What kind of man was Blok?
5. When and how does Victor Serge claim he died?
E-mail your answers to ToddM@mail.uca.edu
*This is the next step toward THE One World Language.
Step Twelve: Your past participle in the fish bowl!
|