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Showing 1 to 15 of 20 results Save | Export
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Gómez-Jiménez, Eva M.; Bartley, Leanne Victoria – Applied Linguistics, 2023
Experts in different fields have claimed that the UK has experienced a process of growing economic inequality since the 1970s. Following Fairclough's dialectal-relational approach, this paper presents a detailed, systematic analysis of the representation of homeless people and homelessness in "The Guardian" and "Daily Mail"…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Homeless People, Newspapers, News Reporting
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Chaudhry, Sajid M.; Christopher, Anne A.; Krishnasamy, Hariharan A/L N. – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2016
The study, qualitative and descriptive in nature, examines the use of transliteration in the paid Pakistani obituary announcements authored in the English language. Primarily, it identifies the frequently used transliterated vocabulary in these linguistic messages and reconnoiters the functional relationship that emerges in and between the textual…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Qualitative Research, English (Second Language), Advertising
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Perrin, Daniel – AILA Review, 2013
Drawing on a case study of newswriting, this article presents media linguistics as a subdiscipline of applied linguistics (AL), dealing with a distinctive field of language use. Language in the media is characterized by specific environments, functions, and structures. Medialinguistic research, however, tends to overcome disciplinary boundaries.…
Descriptors: News Writing, Case Studies, Applied Linguistics, Language Usage
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McCracken, Jill Linnette – Community Literacy Journal, 2009
Newspaper media create interpretations of marginalized groups that require rhetorical analysis so that we can better understand these representations. This article focuses on how newspaper articles create interpretations of sex work that affect both the marginalized and mainstream communities. My ethnographic case study argues that the material…
Descriptors: Newspapers, News Writing, Journalism, Language Usage
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Rose, Mike – College English, 2010
For the past twenty years or so, the author has been fortunate to write for a fairly broad audience. While he was teaching, or running an educational program, or doing research, he was also composing opinion pieces or commentaries about the work he was doing. This process of writing with part of his attention on the classroom or research site and…
Descriptors: Authors, Language Usage, Writing for Publication, Audience Awareness
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Hand, Michael – Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning, 2007
Juliette Goldman and Christine Collier have recently proposed that the editor of "Sex Education" should adopt a policy of replacing the phrase "opposite sex" with "other sex" in all published articles, on the grounds that the word "opposite" has connotations of hostility or adversity. In this brief reply I…
Descriptors: Sex Education, Rhetorical Criticism, Periodicals, Journal Articles
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MacNeal, Edward – ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 1996
Remarks on the "odd" headlines relating to sex in Connecticut, noted as being the only state having a law that bans the use of contraceptives. Cites many incidences of false headlines, in which the body of the article invalidates the headline. States that examples include "92% of young men have AIDS virus"--a gross distortion…
Descriptors: Headlines, Language Usage, News Writing, Newspapers
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Culbertson, Hugh M. – Journalism Quarterly, 1978
Reports on a study indicating that veiled attribution occurs in approximately three-fourths of news stories in both "Time" and Newsweek," and that the attribution phrases used emphasize partisan ties, suggest expertise, and tend to personalize, to add apparent scope to a story, and to be especially vague in international stories.…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Information Sources, Journalism, Language Usage
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Blake, Joseph A.; And Others – Journalism Quarterly, 1978
Reports that most collective behavior events reported in the New York "Times" are described in terms of emotionality and anonymity of membership and are alleged to be violent and spontaneous, and that there are significant rank-order correlations between the reported presence of control agents, reported violence, and attributions of spontaneity.…
Descriptors: Group Behavior, Journalism, Language Usage, Media Research
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Woal, Michael – Central States Speech Journal, 1987
Claims all-news radio programming has appeal because it is monotonous, cyclically repetitive and expectable and that (1) the style encourages "habitual" and "automatic" listening with an economy of effort, and (2) the structure anesthetizes listeners by couching the news in familiar linguistic forms which subtly stabilize and…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Communication Research, Content Analysis, Language Usage
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Fasold, Ralph; And Others – Language in Society, 1990
Examines the effect of general statements against sexist usage in the style manual for "The Washington Post." Analysis is provided of a minor usage pattern that was not the subject of an explicit rule: the difference in the use of middle initials in references to men and to women. (GLR)
Descriptors: Editing, Language Attitudes, Language Patterns, Language Usage
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Ramsey, Shirley – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 1995
Uses content analysis to compare two community newspapers for indices of elaboration identified through various theoretical sources. Traces the relationship of economic development and technological growth to use of elaborative elements in text describing science and technology. Concludes there were strong correlations for breadth and depth in the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Content Analysis, Economic Development, Journalism Research
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Fedler, Fred; And Others – Journalism Quarterly, 1979
An examination of "Time" magazine's treatment of four recent presidents indicates that "Time" continues to use the same techniques of biased reporting as were found in a 1965 study and that it continues to favor Republican presidents. (GT)
Descriptors: Bias, Content Analysis, Language Usage, Media Research
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Sneed, Don – Journalism Educator, 1985
Describes a journalism writing assignment in which students compile a specialized style manual with computer and business terms. (HTH)
Descriptors: Business, Class Activities, Computer Literacy, Higher Education
Strange, Dorothy Flanders; Kebbel, Gary W. – Community College Journalist, 1978
Points out that writing errors of journalism students can result from faulty thought patterns involving thinking in sentence fragments, personifying objects, using bureaucratic abstractions, and condensing complex ideas; examines ways of dealing with sentence fragments and personification. (First of a two-part article.) (GT)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Communication Problems, Error Analysis (Language), Higher Education
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