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Romig, Mark – Studies in Applied Linguistics & TESOL, 2023
This article reviews conversation analytic research on explanations in pedagogical interaction, particularly in language learning classrooms. In reviewing this literature, this paper aims to provide a comprehensive account of what is interactionally involved when giving pedagogical explanations so that future research investigating the…
Descriptors: Pronunciation, Grammar, Vocabulary, Vocabulary Development
Cushing, Ian – Language Policy, 2021
Since their introduction by the Conservative government in 2013, primary school children in England have taken a mandated grammar, punctuation and spelling assessment, which places an emphasis on decontextualised, standardised English and the identification of traditional grammatical terminology. Despite some concise criticisms from educational…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Tests, Grammar, Educational Policy
Zeng, Guocai – Cogent Education, 2018
Theoretically speaking, semantic minimalism and semantic maximalism are two current dominant assumptions on the nature of meaning in the linguistic communication. The former lays more emphasis on the syntactic basis of sentence meaning, while the latter stresses much over the pragmatic properties of utterance meaning. This paper, grounded on the…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Semantics, Syntax, Grammar
Girault, Marie Conceptia; Corredor, David Alberto Rivera – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2019
This article discusses why pedagogical discourse analysis (PDA) can be seen as the departure point to teach through discourse and how language teachers can efficaciously use it in order to bring discourse analysis into the language classroom. To make PDA feasible in language teaching, it requires to be coordinated with actual discourse-based…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Student Projects, Active Learning, Teaching Methods
Huisman, Rosemary – English in Australia, 2016
Poetry is the art shaped through language; to talk about a poem we need at least to talk about its language--but what can be said will depend on the particular linguistic theory, with its particular modelling of language, which we bring to the description. This paper outlines the approach of SFL (Systemic Functional Linguistics), describing in…
Descriptors: Poetry, Language, Linguistics, Discourse Analysis
Ibrahim, Awad – Curriculum Inquiry, 2017
Straddling between the purely political and the poetically artistic, I am arguing, is a Global Hip-Hop Nation (GHHN), which is yet to be charted and its cartography is yet to be demarcated. Taking two examples, the first a Hip-Hop song from within the Arab Spring and the second from the "favelas" in Brazil, my intent is to show what…
Descriptors: Slums, Immigration, Literacy, Grammar
Segal, Alex – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2015
Syllepsis (in one meaning of the term) is most commonly thought of as an ungrammatical construction which can in certain contexts function as a figure of speech. Yet the common view is at odds with syllepsis occurring in well-written prose that we experience neither as ungrammatical nor as figurative; and with its being largely ignored by literary…
Descriptors: Grammar, Sentence Structure, Figurative Language, Language Usage
Carroll, James Edward – Teaching History, 2016
Jim Carroll noticed basic literacy errors in his Year 13s' writing, but on closer examination decided that these were not best addressed purely as literacy issues. Through an intervention based on clauses, Carroll managed to enable his students to write better, but he did this by teasing out principles of historical discourse that underpin…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Discourse Analysis, History, Grammar
Bickes, Hans; Otten, Tina; Weymann, Laura Chelsea – Journal of Social Science Education, 2014
The so-called Greek Financial Crisis, which has been the object of close attention in the German media since the end of 2009, has caused a public debate on who should be held responsible for the decline of crisis-hit Greece, the common currency and the Eurozone. The media's enduring and controversial public discussion has lately been referred to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Economic Climate, Financial Exigency, Discourse Analysis
Luke, Kang-kwong – Discourse Processes: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2012
For almost 80 years, Chinese linguists have been fascinated by sentences like "Pijiu ba, he dianr!" ("Beer, I'll have some!"), which look superficially like a jumbled-up version of "normal-order sentences." Numerous accounts have been proposed to explain their structure and meaning, but no consensus has been reached as to how their true essence…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Chinese, Sentence Structure, Grammar
Keizer, Evelien – Language Sciences, 2012
The aim of this paper is to challenge the generally accepted claim in descriptive and theoretical linguistics that English anaphoric proforms replace constituents (semantic or syntactic units) in underlying representation. On the basis of authentic examples, it is shown that the anaphoric use of the predicative proforms "one" and "do so", the…
Descriptors: Semantics, Grammar, English, Syntax
Paltridge, Brian – Language Teaching, 2014
The term "genre" first came into the field of second-language (L2) writing and, in turn, the field of English for specific purposes (ESP) in the 1980s, with the research of John Swales, first carried out in the UK, into the introduction section of research articles. Other important figures in this area are Tony Dudley-Evans, Ann Johns…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Literary Genres, Language Styles, Grammar
Tian, Xiufeng – English Language Teaching, 2013
This article aims at the feature analysis of four expository essays (Text A/B/C/D) written by secondary school students with a focus on the differences between spoken and written language. Texts C and D are better written compared with the other two (Texts A&B) which are considered more spoken in language using. The language features are…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, English, Oral Language, Written Language
Jones, Christian; Waller, Daniel – ELT Journal, 2011
The traditional division of conditionals into four main types (zero, first, second, and third) has long been called into question. Unfortunately, the awareness that this description does not reflect conditional patterns in actual usage has not generally been reflected in EFL coursebooks. This article re-examines the arguments for a description of…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Teaching Methods, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
Hyatt, David – Teaching in Higher Education, 2013
This paper addresses an issue of increasing significance in the context of taught educational doctorates and argues that this may have wider applicability for doctoral students across a range of social science disciplines. It identifies the need to engage with policy analysis as a key element of such programmes and attempts to address students'…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Graduate Students, Doctoral Programs, Educational Policy