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Becker, Michael; Nevins, Andrew; Levine, Jonathan – Language, 2012
In the English lexicon, laryngeal alternations in the plural (e.g. "leaf" ~ "leaves") impact monosyllables more than finally stressed polysyllables. This is the opposite of what happens typologically, and would thereby run contrary to the predictions of "initial-syllable faithfulness." Despite the lexical pattern, in a wug test we found…
Descriptors: Evidence, Phonology, Dictionaries, Language Acquisition
BOATNER, MAXINE T.; GATES, JOHN E. – 1966
DESIGNED FOR USE IN SECONDARY CLASSES FOR THE DEAF, THIS DICTIONARY LISTS OVER 4,000 IDIOMATIC EXPRESSIONS. FOR EACH IDIOM, THE ENTRY MAY INCLUDE VARIANT FORMS, PART OF SPEECH LABEL, STYLE LABEL, DEFINITION, USAGE NOTE, ILLUSTRATIVE SENTENCES, CROSS REFERENCES, A SYNONYM OR CONTRAST, AND ETYMOLOGY. AN APPENDIX LISTS ESSENTIAL IDIOMS. THIS DOCUMENT…
Descriptors: Deafness, Dictionaries, English, Idioms
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Kraus, David – The Slavic and East European Journal, 1961
Scientific Russian vocabulary, as represented by substantives among the lead entries of a 1955 polytechnic Russian dictionary, is analyzed compositionally and by source language. (GK)
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Descriptive Linguistics, Dictionaries, Etymology
Wilbur, Ronnie B.; Menn, Lise – 1975
Evidence for speaker knowledge of morphological patterns, both derivational and inflectional, is not limited to productive patterns. Nonproductive patterns appear to be accessible in such a way that accessibility (a term preferred to "psychological reality") may be viewed as a function of four somewhat interdependent factors: (1) productivity, (2)…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Definitions, Dictionaries, Language Acquisition