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Vande Kopple, William J. – Written Communication, 2002
This article presents evidence that, from selected spectroscopic articles in the earliest volumes of the Physical Review to other selected spectroscopic articles from the same journal in 1980, a shift in sentence style takes place. This shift is from what M.A.K. Halliday calls the dynamic style (which reflects happenings, processes, and actions)…
Descriptors: Technical Writing, Journal Articles, Periodicals, Sentence Structure
Penelope, Julia – 1980
Although the nature of topicalization is complex and cannot be easily separated from considerations of syntactic structure and sentence focus, analysis of language usage has indicated that topicalization is more a stylistic than a syntactic process. Topicalization refers to moving a noun phrase (NP) into the initial position of a sentence.…
Descriptors: Audiences, Discourse Analysis, Language Styles, Literary Devices
Conway, William D. – Technical Writing Teacher, 1981
Offers examples of appropriate and improper use of the passive voice in technical communications and gives suggestions for using these examples in technical writing classrooms. (RL)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Styles, Negative Attitudes, Sentence Structure
Davison, Alice – 1980
One factor that contributes to the difficulty that a reader may encounter when reading a text is the syntactic complexity of the constructions used in the text. Examples of altered text constructions include the transformations of subjects of subordinate clauses, making them either the subjects or the objects of main clauses. When the conditions…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Discourse Analysis, Language Processing, Language Styles
Campbell, B. G. – 1980
Coherence and cohesion are fundamental considerations of the composing process that help to define the global and local components of texuality. Global text coherence centers on those aspects of the familiar rhetorical situation. Coherence operates at the paragraph and essay levels, answering questions about focus, tone, mode, topic, and thesis.…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
Green, Georgia M. – 1981
Inversion constructions (declarative sentence constructions in which the subject follows part or all of its verb phrase) are distributed over the whole range of spoken and written language, not along the spoken-written dimension but along a colloquial-literary dimension. Some of these inversions are colloquial or literary for functional reasons,…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Language Styles, Language Usage, Literary Styles