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Showing 1 to 15 of 18 results Save | Export
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Ana Lívia Agostinho; Gabriel Antunes de Araujo – Language Documentation & Conservation, 2021
We present a description and an analysis of three related language games in Africa's Gulf of Guinea: Fa d'Ambô's Fa do Vesu, Lung'Ie's Faa di Vesu, and São Tomé and Príncipe Portuguese's P-language. We show how these language games can be used to investigate the linguistic features of their main languages and as learning resources for second…
Descriptors: Second Language Instruction, Educational Games, Language Acquisition, Phonology
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Johnson, Eric J. – Journal for Multicultural Education, 2015
Purpose: This paper aims to outline the misguided underpinnings of the "word gap" concept promoted by Hart and Risley (1995). This concept posits that a "30 million word gap" between children of poverty and those from affluent households accounts for widespread academic disparities. Based on this premise, there has been a…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Poverty, Vocabulary Skills, Social Differences
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Atoofi, Saeid – Linguistics and Education: An International Research Journal, 2013
This research study investigated how the teachers and students at a Persian heritage language class acknowledged and modified their affective behavior based on the affective feedback they received from one another. The notion that interactants can modify their affective output in such fashion is referred in the literature as affective alignment…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Indo European Languages, Feedback (Response), Video Technology
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Pye, Clifton – Language Sciences, 1988
Explores how an anthropological perspective provides a necessary basis for an account of several aspects of the language acquisition process. Discussion focuses on how the patterns of development in phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics appear to be profoundly influenced by the range of adult language structures. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Anthropological Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns, Linguistic Theory
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Hill, Jane H. – Sign Language Studies, 1977
This article reviews the possibilities that a comparative, functionally oriented view of communication evolution offers to a linguist interested in the evolution of human languages and suggests a wide variety of areas which might be further investigated with profit. (CFM)
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Anthropological Linguistics, Behavior Patterns, Communication (Thought Transfer)
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Stokoe, William C. – Sign Language Studies, 1986
Argues that the beginnings of language need to be sought not in the universal abstract grammar proposed by Chomsky but in the evolution of the everyday interaction of the human species. Studies indicate that there is no great gulf between spoken language and nonverbal communication. (SED)
Descriptors: Anthropological Linguistics, Deafness, Diachronic Linguistics, Generative Grammar
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Wetzel, Christopher – American Indian Quarterly, 2006
Language decline in many immigrant and ethnic communities is always a persistent problem in America. To prevent Native tribal languages from becoming obliterated, several organizations have been founded to document and teach Indigenous languages, a number of tribes have crafted ambitious language policies, and Congress approved the Native American…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Tribally Controlled Education, Language Patterns, American Indians
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Berlin, Brent – 1971
A general observation about the vocabularies of most languages is that they tend to increase in size over time. Little is known about the causal mechanisms involved in this lexical expansion, but most anthropologists and linguists are in agreement that it probably mirrors general cultural evolution. The study of lexical growth becomes important if…
Descriptors: Anthropological Linguistics, Anthropology, Classification, Folk Culture
Markowitz, Judith – 1982
A study used children's definitions to explore the culture of the classroom from the perspective of the child. Definitions for school-related terms were elicited from first graders in two classrooms of a public elementary school in the Chicago metropolitan area. After having been acclimated to the presence of the researchers, the students were…
Descriptors: Anthropological Linguistics, Child Development, Child Language, Classroom Communication
Heath, Shirley Brice – Papers and Reports on Child Language Development, 1985
One approach to studying the nature of diverse speech exchange systems across sociocultural groups starts from the premise that all learning is cultural learning, and that language socialization is the way individuals become members of both their primary speech community and their secondary speech communities. Researchers must recognize that the…
Descriptors: Anthropological Linguistics, Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies
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Odlin, Terence – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, 1986
Explores the problem of implicit and explicit knowledge in a second language. The theoretical characterizations of Bialystok and Krashen are shown to be unsatisfactory in addressing these two problems. Some characteristics of explicit knowledge that any improved theory should be able to explain are considered. (SED)
Descriptors: Anthropological Linguistics, Cognitive Processes, Communicative Competence (Languages), Discourse Analysis
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Kronenfeld, David B. – Language Sciences, 1979
Examines the innate faculties that underlie linguistic competence, especially syntactic competence, and proposes a theory of these faculties which accounts for the complexities of language and the evolution of human language. (AM)
Descriptors: Anthropological Linguistics, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Language Ability
MOSAIC, 1979
Presents a look at some of the research being done on the origins of language. (BB)
Descriptors: Anthropological Linguistics, Anthropology, Cultural Context, Ethnology
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Gee, James Paul – Journal of Education, 1989
Reviews anthropological studies and demonstrates how the term "literate" has replaced the term "civilized" and how literacy is currently used to distinguish between different social groups in modern, technological societies. Discusses how teachers of English are actually teaching a set of oral and written social practices associated with the…
Descriptors: Anthropological Linguistics, Elementary Secondary Education, Hidden Curriculum, Language Acquisition
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Voegelin, C. F.; Voegelin, F. M. – International Journal of American Linguistics, 1977
Theorizes that most or all varieties of the Tubatulabal language are currently undergoing enough grammatical degeneration to conclude that it is a dying language. The article states that de-acquisition research has been neglected and will have great relevance in future studies of degenerating grammars. (NCR)
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Anthropological Linguistics, Bilingualism, Communicative Competence (Languages)
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