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Affef Ghai; Sharif Alghazo – Open Education Studies, 2024
This corpus-based study explores the expression of gratitude in the acknowledgement section of doctoral dissertations in both English and Arabic. The objective is to analyse how gratitude in academic discourse is structured in these languages and to explore any differences related to gender. The study examines 80 dissertations (40 in English and…
Descriptors: Doctoral Students, Doctoral Dissertations, Arabic, English
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Kamimura, Taeko – Journal of Pan-Pacific Association of Applied Linguistics, 2016
A study was conducted to examine the differences in narrative essays produced by skilled and unskilled EFL student writers. Twenty-six Japanese university students participated in the study. They were told to write a narrative story based on six-frame pictures. The students were classified into two groups, skilled and unskilled, according to the…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, College Students
Arsyad, Safnil – Online Submission, 2014
To effectively teach university lecturers or students to write a good research article (RA) abstract for publication in international journals, instructors need to know the present characteristics of abstracts written published in such journals. This study examines the discourse structure and linguistic features of RA abstracts written in English…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Discourse Analysis, Documentation, College Students
Reid, Wallis; Gildin, Bonny – 1982
Punctuation is not necessary in a sentence if a pair of adjacent words suggests an intentional conceptual relationship. However, when the pair suggests a relationship that is not a part of the intended communication, the writer must alert the reader, so some punctuation is necessary. When members of an adjacent pair do not suggest a plausible…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Punctuation, Semantics
Vande Kopple, William J. – 1982
There are three dominant conceptions of functional sentence perspective (FSP): (1) a sentence should be analyzed into several segments, each having a different degree of what is called communicative dynamism; (2) a sentence should be analyzed into two segments, the theme and the rheme; and (3) a sentence should be analyzed into two segments, the…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Discourse Analysis, Linguistic Theory, Paragraphs
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Crewe, W. J. – ELT Journal, 1990
Examines the effect of the misuse and over-use of logical connectives in English-as-a-Second-Language undergraduate writing, and suggests that students use a small subset of relatively comprehensible connectives, employ connectives for phrasal expansion, and view logical progression as an integral stage in writing. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English (Second Language), Higher Education, Second Language Instruction
Parry, Kate – 1988
To gain a sense of good rhetorical structure, what students of writing in English as a second language need to do is not to practice writing paragraphs and essays conforming to particular patterns, but rather to recognize and understand the resources available for indicating relationships between the propositions that make up their own, unique…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Discourse Analysis, English (Second Language), Paragraphs
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Matsuhashi, Ann; Quinn, Karen – Written Communication, 1984
Reviews discourse analytic and text comprehension studies for their contributions to a cognitive process view of writing, then reports on a study that combines discourse analysis with online pause data to determine how semantic propositions reflect sentence-level planning patterns. (FL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Language Processing
Bouchard, Robert – Francais dans le Monde, 1985
Eleven brief items providing a range of activities and exercises to help students master the elements of coherence in text and to foster both comprehension and production are presented. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), Comprehension
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Goodin, George; Perkins, Kyle – College English, 1982
Offers rules and comments for using discourse analysis to teach student writers how to convert incoherent compositions into coherent, cohesive prose. (RL)
Descriptors: Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), College English, Discourse Analysis
Hellwig, Harold H. – 1985
Noting that expert computer systems respond to various contexts in terms of knowledge representation, this paper explains that heuristic rules of production, procedural representation, and frame representation have been adapted to such areas as medical diagnosis, signal interpretation, design and planning of electrical circuits and computer system…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Software
Vande Kopple, William J. – 1980
Functional Sentence Perspective (FSP) is a theory that predicts how units of information should be distributed in a sentence and how sentences should be related in a discourse. A binary topic-comment structure is assigned to each FSP sentence. For most English sentences, the topic is associated with the subject or the left-most noun phrase, and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College English, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
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Vande Kopple, William J. – Written Communication, 1994
Presents a study of the grammatical subjects as used in scientific discourse. Provides evidence that the grammatical subjects in a sample of scientific discourse are markedly long. Identifies three pressures that operate on scientists to produce such markedly long grammatical subjects. (HB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Communities, English Instruction
Kurth, Ruth Justine; Stromberg, Linda J. – 1983
A study examined sentence production errors and syntactic complexity in students' writing in two modes of discourse and at three grade levels. Subjects, average and high developmental students enrolled in seventh, ninth, and eleventh grade classes, each wrote two compositions, one in the descriptive the other in the persuasive mode. Data analysis…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Developmental Stages, Discourse Analysis, Error Analysis (Language)
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Woolever, Kristin R. – Journal of Advanced Composition, 1986
Discusses five noun-related sentence level difficulties that first-year law students have in constructing feasible arguments for the courtroom. (MS)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Legal Education (Professions), Persuasive Discourse
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