Sound painting as a special artistic technique of poetic speech. With the help of what sounds does the poet create a certain sound picture? The mazurka resounded

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Motor! Camera! Ball!

The m azurka was distributed. used to
When the mazurka thundered,
Everything in the great hall was trembling,
The parquet cracked under the heel,
Shaking, rattling frames,
Now it's not that: and we, like ladies,
We slide on varnished boards.

The mischievous Shurochka Azarova fools her fiancé Lieutenant Rzhevsky. She doesn't like the way he spoke about her before he saw her. Shurochka's loving uncle gives a ball at his estate and rejoices at the imminent wedding of his niece. Meanwhile, she dresses up in the costume of a hussar cornet and pretends to be her own relative. Lieutenant Rzhevsky is glad to find out from the cornet details about the hated bride. This game takes place against the backdrop of a masquerade ball, which is interrupted by a message about the invasion of Napoleon's troops into the Russian Empire.

"War and Peace" (series "Natasha Rostova"), 1965

Natasha Rostova's first ball in Sergei Bondarchuk's film still strikes the imagination - the dramaturgy, the plastic solution of this large, populous episode of the film, is so masterfully built. It is known that at some point during the filming, the cameraman Anatoly Petritsky, without letting go of the camera, stood on roller skates - the only way to dodge freely between the dancing couples. The ball was filmed in the famous First Pavilion of Mosfilm - this huge room made it possible to use a large crowd and effectively film the "whirlwinds" of the dancers from a great height. But no less beautiful are the portraits of the debutante Natasha, a thin, confused girl who really wants to dance.

Anna Karenina, 1967

Directed by Alexander Zarkhi

The ball at which Vronsky was supposed to dance with Kitty turns into drama for the girl. Already almost a groom, he invited a married lady to dance and, it seems, completely focused on her attention. “Everything was covered in fog” - this is how Kitty Tolstoy conveys the sensations. And the sensitive authors of the film “smear” the image at this moment. We see the hall through Kitty's eyes: only multi-colored spots rush back and forth, only Anna and Vronsky are clearly visible, and they are separated from what is happening by a cocoon of flared feeling.

"Nest of Nobles", 1969

In black-and-white retrospection, a Parisian ball was recreated, at which Lavretsky's wife, Varvara Pavlovna, shines. The vanity, crowding and flickering of people only increase the tension of the hero - he does not like such a wide popularity of his wife. But there is another ball in the film - a homely, comic, summer one. In the old Kalitin park, several pairs of dancers (among them the bent old man Lemm in a canary-colored caftan) are drawn up, they perform an old ceremonial dance, slowly moving hand in hand and bowing to each other. This is one of the most picturesque scenes in the film.

"Father Sergius", 1978

Director - Igor Talankin

The episode of the magnificent ball, at which the emperor “blesses” his former beloved Mary Korotkova for marriage to the brilliant officer Prince Kasatsky, is edited out with shots of the departing groom. He runs away from the world and from worldly life in general. The blow of the revealed truth is too strong. And in the ballroom the sounds of a mazurka are heard - the emperor and the maid of honor of his wife Mary Korotkova are dancing under the touching glances of the courtiers.

We at scientists to sh irie

samovar whether tulsk wow

Or « That-104 »

A. Voznesensky Selection of close-sounding words to thoughts

  1. ...Tr uby tr killing t in Nova gr hell, st oya t b st ide in pu t ivle...
...Night moan at sch and him gro h oh bird whose ubudi; St. and st sv erin v st and near...

From in advance to P yatk on t op tasha on gania pl ky polo vetsky...

Word about Igor's CampaignVarious alliterations

  1. How will he take naked d will appear naked with
Tee she units eat, distance she bud eat

One with oshka, seven with l burnt

Russian folk sayings, rhymed Alliteration

  1. Boo G risty bere G ah, blah G nice water G and,
O, G ory with G rods, G de G flies yu G I G nyat,

O, G glad G de tor G and, G de moz G oh cool G ly sconce G and...

M.V. Lomonosovalliteration of the sound "g"

  1. Not in a in Zdu in ala and re in ate
    Co. t lo m cloco cha and class killed.
A.S. PushkinAlliterations
  1. W and singing Pen true sides l ov
    And punch a pla m day th l slaughter.
    A.S. PushkinAlliterations
  2. dull it's time! eye charm!
    Etc and yat n a me yours I etc osch a flax and I to ra sa...
  3. A.S. Pushkin's fine alliteration: a combination of consonants and vowels
  4. Who to thor gu passion nomu etc and st drink?
    My love I etc dress...
A.S. PushkinAlliterations
  1. how Volga shaft white-headed
    Reaches a whole to the shores.
N. YazykovAlliterations
  1. In l ha, In l ha, in eu but th m nogovo bottom
    You are not a to behind Liv ae wash the floor I...
N. NekrasovAlliterations
  1. Ve black AT seaside. AT zdohi in etra.
AT e l hairy in ozg l ace in about l n.

Bl izko b at R I'm in b e R eg b oats

H each h a R am h e R ny h eln...

H each h and st th h a R am mid a st ya,

H eln t omelenya, h eln tr evog

Br donkey b e R eg, b with b at R her,

looking for with dilapidated with new heck oh...

K. Balmontsmena of alliterative sounds: “v”, “b”, “h”, “s”, etc.

  1. With l odky soon l lost weight l about,
L askovo m l no proh l hell.

"Mi l ouch! My mi l wow!" Light l about,

With l hell of a run l wow l poison.

L ebed pack l s l in by l umg l y,

wda l b, under l Uno be l her.

L during l us to weight l y,

L tends to the l age l and l her.

With l ear nevo l but l ov l Yu

L epet zerka l leg l she is.

"Mi l ouch! My mi l ouch! L yub l Yu"

By l night g l poison from the sky l she is.

K. Balmont Alliteration of the sound "l"

  1. ele gannaya ko weasel in ele critical ck om beating
Elast personally rustling down the highway to another eu ku.

I.SeveryaninAlliterations

  1. Where, oh n, br about nz s h in n or gr a n ita gr a n b...
V. MayakovskyAlliteration
  1. Wwe R hu R ychat ge R moto moto R s:
We are fu R e R a poco pp nye R anyhow,

We p R ev R let's go pp ode to g pp oby,

We dare R th... You will be gone soon pp about.

V. InberAlliteration conveyed the sound of motors

  1. For three days it was heard
as on a boring, long road

Pere st at to ivali st s to i: on in st about to, during st about to, during st about to...

P. Antokolsky Alliteration conveyed the sound of wheels

  1. My youthful ear in tunes captivated
And between shroud left the flute.

A.S. PushkinSound repeat

  1. Dressed up dark glades
wide white veil.

M.Yu. LermontovSound repeat

  1. At Black seas plane tree stands young.
M.Yu. LermontovSound repeat
  1. From steel began to fly
Screams stained with blood

Flowed into the glass, and those fell

Tear slipping terrible.

  1. I would ban the "sale of oats and hay"...
After all, it smells like the murder of a father and son.

N. Aseev A type of sound writing called “poetic etymology”, when phonetically similar words are selected for one of the words, achieving a single sound structure of the verse

  1. He is beside himself. He brought with him
Yard noise and nothing to do:

There is no such sadness in the world,

Which the snow would not cure.

  1. A horse thief crept along the fence,
The grapes were sunburnt.

B. Pasternak A type of sound writing called “poetic etymology”, when phonetically similar words are selected for one of the words, achieving a single sound structure of the verse

  1. I look into the distance with my eyes ...
low stairs;

this Silesia

entered the spleen.

V. Mayakovsky A type of sound writing called “poetic etymology”, when phonetically similar words are selected for one of the words, achieving a single sound structure of the verse

  1. A crowd of rushing metaphors
I went to museums and cafes.

P. Antokolsky A type of sound writing called “poetic etymology”, when phonetically similar words are selected for one of the words, achieving a single sound structure of the verse

  1. Around mulberry and thuja,
And what is Tulya?

Is it a Turkish

Thin waist?

Is it a river

Mountain, melt?

Is it a whistle?

Is it a goat?

A. Voznesensky A type of sound writing called “poetic etymology”, when phonetically similar words are selected for one of the words, achieving a single sound structure of the verse

  1. At Gagliani il Coglioni
Order yourself in Tver

With parmesan pasta

Let's boil an egg.

A.S. Pushkin A type of sound writing called "poetic etymology", when phonetically similar words are selected for one of the words, achieving a single sound structure of the verse

  1. Lilac, lilac, lilac,
Lilac branch.

You don't fit and don't

Gray cap.

Russian folk ditty A type of sound writing called “poetic etymology”, when phonetically similar words are selected for one of the words, achieving a single sound structure of the verse

  1. ... Canopy but you, glue but you, resh et chat...
...Issue feces co cola from pr av wow hand wa...

Fly you my falcon, you juice and gave eco,

And you juice and gave eco to the native side.

Russian folk song A type of sound writing called "assonance" is built on the repetition of predominantly stressed vowel sounds, sometimes in similar combinations with consonants.

  1. Brozh at am i along at persons sh at many
enter at in many ways Yu bottom temple,

Sizh at le between Yu burden without at many

I'm betrayed Yu to your dreams.

A.S. PushkinAssonance, built on a booming "u"

  1. At our at pins on poppy at shke,
H at be at three lit up at shki

And the woods are blue top at shki

Franz at z t at t like t at t.

I scored a charge in n at sheet t at th

I d at small: at goshch at i dr at ha!..

That's h a crackle a whether b a R a b a us

And would retreat a antimony a us.

Then a counts a be we st a whether r a us,

Tov a groves counts a th.

M.Yu. LermontovAssonance built on the sounds "u" and "a"

  1. It was:
socialism

enthusiastic word!

With a flag

became left,

on the head

went down glory.

Passed through the fire

through cannon muzzle.

Instead of mountains of delight

grief valley.

communism

commonest case.

V. Mayakovsky Dissonance is a complex type of sound writing, built on the use of consonant, but not rhyming words; through this technique, the poem acquires sound integrity

bourgeois

brutalized temperament.

torn apart by thiers,

1. With the help of what particles can the form of the imperative mood of the verb be formed? 2. With the help of what particles you can form a shape

subjunctive mood of the verb?

3. With the help of what particles can forms of comparative and superlative degrees of adjectives be formed?

you need to make a story on these issues, help pzhzhzhzh)) What is called a sacrament? What is a real sacrament? With the help of what

suffixes is it formed? What is a passive participle? With what suffixes is it formed? What is a participle turnover? How is it distinguished in writing?

please help urgently. just give the right answers. A1. Which word is NOT spelled separately?

□ 1) (not) listening

□ 2) (un)well

□ 3) (not) neat

□ 4) (not) few

A2. In what word are two letters H (HH) written at the place of the gap?

□ 1) The sea is agitated.. about the storm.

□ 2) The master crafted the figurine..

□ 3) The doctor carefully examined the patient.

□ 4) The teacher called another and I relieved..o sighed.

□ 1) early..

□ 2) exhausted..

□ 3) askew..

□ 4) left..

□ 1) (well done)

□ 2) (c) moment

□ 3) (somewhere)

□ 4) (c) on the fly

□ 1) The sun rises above a cloudless horizon and makes its daily journey, never meeting clouds.

□ 2) All the way, Petya prepared for how he, without hinting at his previous acquaintance, would behave with Denisov.

□ 3) I startled in surprise, spilling milk.

□ 4) Not worrying about anything, not caring about the sent chases, the culprit of all this mess slowly approached the old house.

□ 1) rust

□ 2) sometime

□ 3) scooping

□ 4) two

(1) The air didn’t smell so much anymore - dampness seemed to be pouring in it again ... (2) The boys’ conversation gradually faded away along with the lights. (3) The dogs even dozed, the horses, as far as I could distinguish in the slightly squeaky, weakly pouring light of the stars, also lay with bowed heads ...

IN 3. In sentence (3) find the gerund, indicate its type.

C1. Write what role the description of nature plays in I. S. Turgenev's story "Bezhin Meadow".

Option 2

A1. Which word is NOT spelled together?

□ 1) (not) sleeping

□ 2) (not) loudly

□ 3) (not) reading

□ 4) (not) summery

A2. In what word does one letter H appear at the place of the gap?

□ 1) The furnishings in the house were simple and relaxed..a.

□ 2) You acted courageously..o.

□ 3) The flowers in the bouquet looked natural..o.

□ 4) The luggage was lighter..a few kilograms.

A3. In what dialect is the letter A written at the place of the pass?

□ 1) good..

□ 2) dream..

□ 3) gullible..

□ 4) dry..

A4. What adverb is spelled together?

□ 1) (this) hour

□ 2) (in) French

□ 3) (someday)

□ 4) (on) the go

A5. Which sentence is punctuated incorrectly?

□ 1) Travelers, stopping among the fields, chose an overnight stay, laid out a fire and put a cauldron on it, in which they cooked kulish for themselves.

□ 2) Both dogs jumped into the circle of light and immediately sat down, sticking out their red tongues.

□ 3) The Cossacks, stretching their carts around the whole city in two rows, settled down in kurens.

□ 4) Without a twig in his hand, at night, he, without any hesitation, rode alone against the wolf ...

A6. In which word is the letter denoting the stressed vowel correctly highlighted?

□ 1) briefly

□ 2) nowhere

□ 3) satisfies

□ 4) indulging

Read the text and complete tasks B1-B3 and C1.

(1) The dawn has not yet blushed anywhere, but it has already turned white in the east ... (2) In some places, living sounds, voices began to be heard, and a liquid, early breeze began to roam and flutter over the earth. (3) I quickly got up and approached the boys.

IN 1. From sentence (1) write out the word of the state category.

IN 2. From sentence (2) write out the adverb.

IN 3. From sentence (3) write out the invariable parts of speech.

C1. Write with the help of what techniques I. S. Turgenev depicts nature in the story “Bezhin Meadow” (using the example of the above passage).

Text No. 3 1) August "ovsky or" August? 2) Which is correct: August evening or August evening? 3) Reference books on modern Russian

literary pronunciation note this adjective fluctuates in stress. 4) Moreover, this oscillation is very old, and it is stably preserved. 5) According to the rule, this adjective should have the same stress as in the noun from which it is formed. 6) That is, Ravgust and Ravgustovsky. 7) Dictionaries give such stress in the first place as correct, literary. 8) Remember, S.A. Yesenina: 9) I don’t want to fly to the zenith, Too much body needs, Why does your name ring like that, Like “August coolness? language, there is a tendency towards rhythmic balance. 11) It is she who shifts the stress to the middle of the word. 12) For example, in A.T. Tvardovsky we read: 13) A thousand miles away In the direction of the Dnieper - The cool sun of the August "ovskoy. S.Yu. Kunyaeva: 14) It smells of bitter coolness, August dew, Plantain and mint - In a word, that neither is the sworn Central Russian grass. 15) The pronunciation of August "ovsky modern literary dictionaries indicate as an acceptable norm. 16) So, in the correct literary speech one should say "August evening, but the pronunciation of August" is also acceptable. (Z. Lyustrov, L. Skvortsov, V. Deryagin To friends of the Russian language) Tasks 1. Set the type of speech. Justify your opinion. 2. Determine the topic and main idea. 3. Name the section of the science of language that studies the pronunciation of words. Which linguists do you know in this area? 4. Specify way of communication in the 2nd paragraph (3-7th sentences) 5. Indicate the ways of forming words polysyllabic, balance, plantain, Central Russian 6. What sound is indicated by the letter e in the word evening in the first syllable? 7. Name all morphological features words are formed (5th sentence) 8. Write out from the text the words with the spelling "Checked unstressed vowels in the root of the word", and then with the spelling "Unchecked unstressed vowels in the root of the word" 9. Indicate all the numbers of sentences with introductory words you. Determine their role in the text. Replace them with synonymous introductory phrases. 10. Write a miniature essay on the topic “Variations in the Language Norm” or “Active Processes in the Stress Area”, using the information from this text. Give your own examples (consult a dictionary for help).

Wise Thoughts

(May 26 (June 6), 1799, Moscow - January 29 (February 10), 1837, St. Petersburg)

Russian poet, playwright and prose writer. Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin has a reputation as a great or greatest Russian poet. In philology, Pushkin is regarded as the creator of the modern Russian literary language.

Quote: 171 - 187 of 416

Love of tender beauties
More reliable than friendship and kinship:
Above her and in the midst of rebellious storms
You retain the rights.
(*Eugene Onegin*, 1823-1831)


Love is one - the fun of a cold life,
Love is one - torment of hearts:
She gives only one moment of joy,
And there is no end in sight for grief.


People are never satisfied with the present and, having experienced little hope for the future, decorate the irrevocable past with all the colors of their imagination.


The mazurka rang out. used to
When the mazurka thundered,
Everything in the great hall was trembling,
The parquet cracked under his heels.
The frames shook and rattled;
Now it's not that: and we, like ladies,
We slide on varnished boards.
(*Eugene Onegin*, 1823-1831)


Dreams and years have no return;
I will not renew my soul ... - (Onegin)
(*Eugene Onegin*, 1823-1831)


Dreams Dreams! where is your sweetness?
(*Eugene Onegin*, 1823-1831)


I'm sad and easy; my sadness is light;
My sorrow is full of you.


I'm bored, demon.
- What to do, Faust?
Such is your destiny.


I have no happiness. I thought my people
In contentment, in glory to calm,
To win his love with generosity -
But put aside the empty cookie:
Living power is hateful for the mob,
They only know how to love the dead.
We are crazy when people splash
Or an ardent cry disturbs our heart!
God sent gladness to our land,
The people howled, dying in agony;
I opened granaries for them, I am gold
I scattered them, I found work for them -
They cursed me madly!
The fire fire destroyed their houses,
I built new homes for them.
They reproached me with fire!
Here is the black court: look for her love. (Tsar Boris Godunov)
(*Boris Godunov*, December 1824 - November 1825)


I am now sad and joyful,
Not only sadness... my soul,
I'm no good at all...
Under old age, life is such a muck ... - (Tatyana's aunt)
(*Eugene Onegin*, 1823-1831)


Spouse's opinions
For a virtuous wife
Should always be respected.
(*Eugene Onegin*, 1823-1831)


There is a lot of talk about the ball that the nobility should give on the occasion of the coming of age of the sovereign heir. Prince Dolgoruky (chief master of the horse and leader of St. Petersburg) and Count Shuvalov dispose of this. Dolgoruky sent Naryshkin a letter written in French, in which he asked him to participate in the subscription. Naryshkin answered: * Gracious sir, from the translation from your Excellency's letter, I saw etc. *. Probably the merchants will also give their ball. There will be half a million holidays. What will the people who are dying of hunger say? [...] Last April 28 there was finally a ball given by the nobility on the occasion of the coming of age of the Grand Duke. He was very successful, as they say. There was no turmoil at the crossing, no misfortune on a cramped street from a multitude of people gathered. (1834)
(*Diary*, 1833-1835)


My poems slipped into oblivion.
What is the glory of the world?.. smoke and dust!
(* N. N. *; * Accept * Nevsky Almanac ... *, 1825)


My friend, Let us dedicate our souls to the Motherland with wonderful impulses!


Youth is a great magician. (Youth is the greatest magician.)


Moscow... how much in this sound
Merged for the Russian heart!
How much resonated in it!
(*Eugene Onegin*, 1823-1831)


We know the time
In a village without big fuss:
The stomach is our faithful breguet.
(*Eugene Onegin*, 1823-1831)