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ENGLISH FOR CRIMINOLOGY

3.2.3 INTERROGATING A SUSPECT

“Understanding the correct processes and


UNIT 3 legal parameters for interviewing, questioning, and
interrogation, can make the difference between having a
suspect’s confession accepted as evidence by the court
or not.”

LAWMAKING

3.2 CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION


3.2.3 INTERROGATION TECHNIQUES

UNIT 3

LAWMAKING

3.2 CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION


3.2.4 THE ROLE OF FORENSICS

FORENSIC GENETICS
1
UNIT 3 FORENSIC ODONTOLOGY
2

FORENSIC ENGINEERING
3

FORENSIC PATHOLOGY
4
LAWMAKING FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY
5

FORENSIC ANTHROPOLOGY
6

FORENSIC TOXICOLOGY
7

FORENSIC ENTOMOLOGY
3.2 CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION 8
3.2.4 THE ROLE OF FORENSICS

FORENSIC TECHNIQUES

BALLISTICS
UNIT 3
ALUMINIUM POWDER
SUPERGLUE FUMING
GUNSHOT RESIDUE
TRACE EVIDENCE: Hair, saliva
LAWMAKING LASER ILLUMINATION
ACCELERANT

3.2 CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION


3.2.4 THE ROLE OF FORENSICS
PHRASAL VERBS v A phrasal verb is a phrase or expression that consists of a
verb plus another word or two, like this:
[verb + adverb] e.g: look up
[verb + preposition] e.g: look after
UNIT 3 [verb + adverb + preposition] e.g: look forward to

v The whole phrase acts as a verb, and has a different meaning


from the original verb. For example, look up, look after and
look forward to do NOT mean the same as look.

v What distinguishes a phrasal verb from a verb followed by a


LAWMAKING preposition not only is the meaning but also the stress:
e.g: to put together vs to charge with

v Because we cannot always work out the meaning of a phrasal


verb from its individual words, phrasal verbs are usually
"idiomatic". They are very common in spoken English, and
less common in formal written English.

v Most phrasal verbs cannot be separated by their object, but


some can and they are said to be "separable" because the
object can go between the verb and the rest of the phrase.
3.2 CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION Have you come across any new evidence?
Mary turned on the radio & Mary turned the radio on.
3.2.4 THE ROLE OF FORENSICS
VERB PATTERNS

In English, when a verb is followed by another verb, the second verb


UNIT 3 may be an infinitive (to go), bare infinitive (go) or -ing form (going).
It all depends on the first verb. See these different patterns in the
following c-map:

Explanation of Exercise 4 (page 70)

Mean : signify vs intend.


LAWMAKING Stop: give up completely vs, finish something to do
something else.

Regret: to be sorry of sth in the past vs sth in the present.

Go on. continue doing sth vs start sth new.

Remember: after you did sth vs before you do sth.

3.2 CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION Stand: tolerate vs be in a particular situation

Try: test sth to see if it works vs attempt to do sth

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