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Aktas, Rahime Nur; Cortes, Viviana – Journal of English for Academic Purposes, 2008
This paper analyzes the use of a special type of unspecific noun, called "shell nouns" [Hunston, S., & Francis, G. (1999). "Pattern grammar". Amsterdam: Benjamins; Schmid, H. (2000). "English abstract nouns as conceptual shells: From corpus to cognition". Berlin: Walter de Gruyter], which are frequently used as cohesive devices, in the written…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Graduate Students, Nouns, English for Academic Purposes
Dalle, Teresa; Inglis, Margaret – 1990
In a study at Memphis State University (Tennessee), international students training as teaching assistants were taught the importance of discourse markers and other techniques for communicating in the classroom. The discourse markers are verbal cues that serve important pedagogical functions such as separating ideas, indicating temporal…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques, Definitions, English for Academic Purposes
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Shaw, Philip; Liu, Eric Ting-Kun – Applied Linguistics, 1998
This study investigated register features of 164 foreign students' English writing before and after full-time courses in English for academic purposes. Results indicate the major changes were from features of spoken English to those more typical of formal writing, both in surface detail and in more fundamental characteristics. Less change occurred…
Descriptors: College Students, Comparative Analysis, English (Second Language), English for Academic Purposes
Rees-Miller, Janie – 1994
A study was conducted at an American university to collect data on how native English-speaking students asked questions in class. The data were analyzed for use of syntactic forms, formulaic expressions or prefatory comments, terms of address, functions fulfilled by the questions, and politeness markers. The results were then compared with the…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis