Dictation of National Unity
10.11.2020
Students and staff of the University wrote the Dictation of National Unity.
The Dictation of National Unity at Luhansk Taras Shevchenko National University began with an opening speech by Kateryna Hlukhovtseva, Doctor of Philology, Professor of the Department of Ukrainian Philology and General Linguistics, who congratulated all the participants of this event on the Day of Ukrainian Writing and Language, wished happiness and health, peace and harmony … She expressed a sincere desire to all those present to witness the economic and spiritual prosperity of Ukraine, to witness how a powerful Ukrainian word helps in work, study, everyday life, becomes something necessary, without which a person cannot live.
Traditionally, on this day, the staff and students of the university join in writing the Dictation of National Unity, demonstrating by this their involvement in expanding the information space of the Ukrainian language, and their love for the language, and the need for it to learn and communicate, and the joy that a person experiences when joining something collective that is of great importance to society. The Dictation of National Unity is a kind of all-Ukrainian cleanup, becoming a participant in which you become rich in heart and soul.
The Dictation of National Unity was written in the University Administration by Serhii Savchenko, university rector, Doctor of p]Pedagogical Sciences, Professor; Vice-Rector Leonid Vakhovskyi, Doctor of Pedagogical Sciences, Professor; Dmytro Uzhchenko, Candidate of Philological Sciences, Associate Professor; Oleksandr Babichev, Candidate of Pedagogical Sciences, Associate Professor, Oleksandr Meniailenko, Doctor of Technical Sciences, Professor.
The event was joined by employees of all departments of the HEI – institutes, faculties, colleges, lyceums.
At the Faculty of Ukrainian Philology and Social Communication, both students and teachers wrote the Dictation of National Unity. The second-year students and teachers of the Department of Ukrainian Philology and General Linguistics were especially active.
Dmytro Pomazan, third-year student, was the best among the students, but he was also frightened by the word “gadgets” (in Ukrainian ґаджети) had to be written with the Ukrainian letter ґ. But Anastasia Bespala (second-year student) easily overcame this springboard.
In general, everyone was pleased with the dictation in which our history and modernity are so organically intertwined.
Faculty of Ukrainian Philology
and Social Communications