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Merriman, William E.; And Others – Journal of Child Language, 1993
Relative importance of appearance and potential function in children's object naming was examined. First, 16 children, taught novel names for unfamiliar objects, had to decide whether these applied to items that resembled the training objects in appearance or potential function. Then the name training procedure was revised so that equal emphasis…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Research, Testing, Toddlers
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De Villiers, Jill; Roeper, Thomas – Journal of Child Language, 1995
Two studies are described that investigated preschool children's sensitivity to relative clauses as barriers to the movement of "wh" questions. A cross-sectional study and a longitudinal study conducted over the course of one year found that young children refused to extract "wh" questions from the ungrammatical site inside a…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cross Sectional Studies, Grammar, Language Acquisition
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Hebrard, Jean – Langue Francaise, 1975
By analyzing different language tests currently in use for elementary school children, the article criticizes psychometric means of evaluation and ideas about language and language acquisition resulting from psychometric evaluation. (Text is in French.) (CLK)
Descriptors: Child Language, Evaluation Methods, French, Language Acquisition
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Thibaut, Jean-Pierre; And Others – Journal of Child Language, 1995
Investigated the actionality effect in 48 French-speaking children (ages 5;0 to 7;11) by systematically varying the voice of the test sentences and the voice of the interpretive requests. The interaction between actionality, voice of sentence, and interpretive request revealed that the actionality effect depended on the type of task used to assess…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Ability, Comparative Analysis, Comprehension
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Gropen, Jess; And Others – Journal of Child Language, 1991
Two experiments were performed on the ability of children and adults to understand and produce locative verbs. Results confirm that children tend to make syntactic errors with sentences containing "fill" and "empty," encoding the content argument as direct object. (33 references) (JL)
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Error Patterns, Language Acquisition
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Graham, Susan A.; Poulin-Dubois, Diane – Journal of Child Language, 1999
Two experiments examined infants' reliance on object shape versus color for word generalization to animate and inanimate objects. Infants were taught labels for either novel vehicles or novel animals using preferential-looking procedure or an interactive procedure. Results of both experiments indicated that infants limited their word…
Descriptors: Animals, Auditory Stimuli, Child Language, Color
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Merriman, William E.; And Others – Journal of Child Language, 1995
Investigated simple, appearance-predicted, and reality-predicted labelling in 36 3-, 4-, and 5-year olds. An age-related appearance-reality shift was observed in simple labelling. It is argued that younger children maintained the one-label-per-predicate pattern because of inflexible encoding; older children did so because of better understanding…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Mapping, Communication (Thought Transfer), Deception
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Sharpe, Dean; Lacroix, Guy – Journal of Child Language, 1999
Two experiments suggest that adults and even preschoolers possess interpretive structures--particularly object structure--that are nonclassical in the sense that they can be used to resolve an apparent contradiction. Results further suggest that certain interpretive structures present themselves in reasoning about particular predicate-object…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Higher Education
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Pierce, Amy E. – Language Acquisition, 1992
Empirical evidence is presented in favor of a theory that attributes the delay in the acquisition of the passive to young children's ability to accomplish nonlocal assignment of features. Two experiments testing monolingual Spanish-speaking children's knowledge of the passive are discussed and analyzed in light of the theory of Argument-chain…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Language, Grammar, Language Acquisition
Mazeika, Edward J. – 1977
This paper describes an instrument used to assess the receptive language of children. The bilingual child is tested first in the non-dominant language. When the ceiling is reached in the non-dominant language, the tester switches to the dominant language. (The ideal situation would be to give the test in one language one day, then repeat the test…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English (Second Language)
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Klein, Elaine C. – Issues in Applied Linguistics, 1993
Discusses the relationship between universal grammar and second language (L2) acquisition. Explores the phenomenon by testing children of contrasting first languages to see whether null-prep is a general acquisition phenomenon among L2 learners of English, and whether child learners, in contrast to adults, produce null-prep because of first…
Descriptors: Child Language, Contrastive Linguistics, Elementary School Students, English (Second Language)
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Ball, Arnetha F. – Linguistics and Education, 1995
Reports on a two-part study of second-grade African American students' uses of various forms of the /-s/ suffix, replicating J. Torrey's 1972 study on the correlation of language and educational achievement. Findings suggest the need to reflect diversity and flexibility in design and implementation of assessment and instruction materials and the…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Black Dialects, Child Language, Comparative Analysis
Miyata, Hiroko – MITA Working Papers in Psycholinguistics, 1993
The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that children's use of Japanese case particles obeys the grammatical principles introduced at the earlier stage of language development. In previous studies concerning the acquisition of Japanese case examined through the experimental method, it has been suggested that children acquire the functional use…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Child Language, Foreign Countries, Japanese
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Surian, Luca – Journal of Child Language, 1995
Investigated the relationship between children's failures to produce unambiguous utterances and the mental effort demands in children (ages five, six, seven, and nine years), using finger-tapping and message production tasks, separately and simultaneously. Findings suggest that the relative effort requirements of communication decrease with…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Child Language, Cognitive Development, Communication Skills
Webster, Brendan O'Connor; Ingram, David – 1972
Research was conducted to study systematically the comprehension and production of the pronouns "he, she, him, her" in the language of normal and linguistically deviant children. The purposes of the study were to: observe the manner in which normal children comprehend and produce these four pronouns, in terms of both their use and their…
Descriptors: Child Language, Comprehension, Delayed Speech, Distinctive Features (Language)
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