Language/Speech is divided to certain strata or levels. The linguists distinguish basic and nonbasic (sometimes they term them differently: primary and secondary) levels. That depends on whether a level has got its own unit or not. If a level has its own unit then this level is qualified as basic or primary. If a level doesn't have a unit of its own then it is a non-basic or secondary level. Thus the number of levels entirely depend on how many language (or speech) units in language. There's a number of conceptions on this issue: some scientists say that there are four units (phoneme/phone; morpheme/morph; lexeme/lex and sentence), others think that there are five units like phonemes,
Added by: dinhluyen2704 | Karma: 406.39 | Black Hole | 24 March 2014
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New Inside out All levels
This is the books people to learn English
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Schooling the Estate Kids chronicles the trajectory of one Kent secondary school which was twice dubbed 'the worst school in England' in the national press. Serving a high poverty neighbourhood, The Ramsgate School was challenged by national targets, low levels of attainment of the school intake at 11 and difficulties of recruitment and retention of quality staff.
Added by: barsik_ua | Karma: 60.67 | Black Hole | 2 February 2014
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Destination C1 C2
A reliable, three-level series focusing on vocabulary and grammar, ideal for students at advanced level. Contains an up-to-date syllabus based on the C1 and C2 levels of the Council of Europe's framework.
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