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Perez, Cesar Morales – GLOSA, 1991
This article outlines strategies for the inferring of English scientific terms by Spanish speakers. The article considers factors affecting the process of inference, the use of context morphology, and word origin in inferring word meaning. (SR)
Descriptors: English for Science and Technology, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Inferences

Master, Peter – English for Specific Purposes, 1991
The analysis of 2,979 subject-verb pairs in an American science magazine to determine the relative frequency of inanimate subjects with active verbs found that such usage was more prevalent than the use of inanimate subjects with passive verbs, especially when the subject was abstract, typically to show causality or to explain. (22 references)…
Descriptors: Afro Asiatic Languages, English for Science and Technology, Second Language Instruction, Tenses (Grammar)

Flowerdew, John – Applied Linguistics, 1992
An empirical study of the speech act of definition in science lectures found that definitions signposted the logical/discourse structure of the lecture, helped to maintain comprehension as discourse progressed, and were often clustered together in discourse. (14 references) (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Data Collection, Definitions, Discourse Analysis, English for Science and Technology

Lynch, Brian K. – TESOL Quarterly, 1990
Responds to criticism concerning a proposed model of evaluation for a Reading English for Science and Technology program. (seven references) (JL)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), English for Science and Technology, Models, Program Evaluation

Marco, Maria Jose Luzon – English for Specific Purposes, 2000
Focuses on the usefulness of corpus-based analysis to discover linguistic patterns selected and favored by a specific genre. Results show that the frameworks "the . . . of,""A . . . of," and "be . . .to," when used in medical papers, enclose restricted sets of lexical items and that the selection of specific…
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, English for Science and Technology, Language Patterns, Language Styles

Malcolm, Lois – English for Specific Purposes, 1987
Analysis of tense usage in 20 scientific articles from the "Journal of Pediatrics" reveals a hierarchy of sociolinguistic relationships among context-dependent rhetorical functions, context-independent temporal meanings, and actual tense choices. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English for Science and Technology, Language Styles, Language Usage

Grabe, William – World Englishes, 1988
Argues that English is the major international language at least in part because it is the dominant world language of science and technology, and suggests that no country can afford to ignore the important role English plays in information access and technology transfer and still expect to compete professionally and economically. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Access to Information, English, English for Science and Technology, Global Approach

Soheili, A.; Barjasteh, D.; Al Qadhi, Laila – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2001
Proposes "technicisation" theory with five central hypotheses to account for various aspects of foreign students learning Technical English (TE), including its linguistic, learning, experiential, cultural, and motivational dimensions. Suggests that the fundamental hypotheses are applicable to TE learning but they may, mutatis mutandis,…
Descriptors: Engineering, English for Science and Technology, Foreign Students, Higher Education

King, Philip – System, 1989
Analysis of how students of English for Science and Engineering use certain categories of nouns in their technical writing projects revealed a significant use of "sub-technical" and "text-structuring" words serving both referential and discourse-oriented functions. The use of matching or cloze-type and open-ended writing exercises to improve…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English for Science and Technology, Higher Education, Language Patterns

Swales,John M. – TESOL Quarterly, 1990
Discusses a proposed "context adaptive" model for English-as-a-Second-Language program evaluation and suggests that the boundaries are set too narrowly within this model between phenomena and contexts and that the model of the Reading English for Science and Technology program in Guadalajara (Mexico) suffers from this constriction.…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), English for Science and Technology, Foreign Countries, Models

Fuentes, Alejandro Curado – Language Learning & Technology, 2001
Outlines a way of dealing with vocabulary in English for academic purposes instruction in light of insights provided by empirical observation. Focusing on collocation in the context of English for special purposes (ESP), and more specifically, English for information science and technology, shows how the results of the contrastive study of lexical…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Databases, English for Science and Technology, English for Special Purposes
Burrough-Boenisch, Joy – English for Specific Purposes, 2005
When 45 biologists from eight countries were asked to critically read and amend the English in Discussion sections of three Dutch-authored draft research papers, many of their alterations impacted on the hedging. This article discusses these alterations. In particular, it focuses on the hotspots in the texts, i.e., the points on which several…
Descriptors: Research Reports, Change, Literary Devices, English for Science and Technology
Kaplan, Robert B. – 1991
A discussion of the dominant role of English in international science and technology looks at the interplay of several factors occurring during the post-World War II period: (1) imposition of English on the post-war world by the English-speaking victors (Britain, United States, Australia, New Zealand); (2) development of the first international…
Descriptors: Educational History, English, English for Science and Technology, Foreign Countries
Master, Peter – Online Submission, 1993
The determiners in English include three categories: predeterminers, central determiners, and postdeterminers. The focus of the present study is the central determiners because they comprise the largest group and because a minimum of one central determiner is required in the generation of any noun phrase. Furthermore, the central determiners have…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Discourse Communities, Nouns, Academic Discourse

Nwogu, Kevin Ngozi – English for Specific Purposes, 1997
Investigates the structure of information in all sections of the medical research paper. Findings identify an eleven-move schema, out of which nine were found to be "normally required" and two "optional." Each schema was found to embody "constituent elements" and to be characterized by distinct linguistic features. (36 references) (Author/CK)
Descriptors: Data Analysis, English for Science and Technology, Language Research, Medical Research