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eggs in one basket; don't cast pearls before swine > to cast pearls
                            before swine.

                                  2.  Different  approaches  to  the  classification  of
                            phraseological units.
                                  So, a phraseological unit is a complex phenomenon with a
                            number of important features, which can therefore be approached
                            from  different  points  of  view.  Hence,  there  exist  a  considerable
                            number  of  different  classifications  devised  by  defferent  scholars
                            and based on different principles.
                                  Semantic  approach  stresses  the  importance  of  idiomaticity,
                            functional  –  syntactic  inseparability,  contextual  –  stability  of
                            context  combined  with  idiomaticity.  The  traditional  and  oldest
                            principle  for  classifying  phraseological  units  is  based  on  their
                            original content and might be alluded to as thematic (although the
                            term is not universally accepted). The approach is widely used in
                            numerous  English  and  American  guides  to  idiom,  phrase  books,
                            etc.  On  this  principle,  idioms  are  classified  according  to  their
                            sources  of  origin,  "source"  referring  to  the  particular  sphere  of
                            human activity, of life of nature, of natural phenomena, etc. So, L.
                            P.  Smith  gives  in  his  classification  groups  of  idioms  used  by
                            sailors, fishermen, soldiers, hunters and associated with the realia,
                            phenomena  and  conditions  of  their  occupations.  In  Smith's
                            classification  we  also  find  groups  of  idioms  associated  with
                            domestic  and  wild  animals  and  birds,  agriculture  and  cooking.
                            There are also numerous idioms drawn from sports, arts, etc. This
                            principle  of  classification  is  sometimes  called  etymological.  The
                            term does  not seem appropriate since we usually mean something
                            different  when  we  speak  of  the  etymology  of  a  word  or  word-
                            group: whether the word (or word-group) is native  or borrowed,
                            and,  if the  latter, what is the source of borrowing. It is true that
                            Smith  makes  a  special  study  of  idioms  borrowed  from  other
                            languages, but that is only a small part of his classification system.
                            The  general  principle  is  not  etymological.  Smith  points  out that













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