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Boggs, Stephen T.; Watson-Gegeo, Karen Ann – Language in Society, 1978
Narratives from part-Hawaiian children 5 to 12 years old in a variety of circumstances were collected for several years. Typical verbal routines, ways of analyzing the data, tendency of routines to structure speech events, functions of nonnarrative routines in narrative performance, and establishing a context for narration are considered. (EJS)
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Discourse Analysis, Hawaiian

Gerhardt, Julie; Savasir, Iskender – Language in Society, 1986
Examination of the use of the simple present verb tense by three-year-old children (N=2) indicates that analyses in terms of tense or aspect are not adequate to account for its use. Results indicate a need to recognize the way in which the form implicitly refers to norms and thereby entails a type of impersonal motivation. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Discourse Analysis, English, Language Acquisition

Lein, Laura; Brenneis, Donald – Language in Society, 1978
Focuses on arguments among White American children in a small town in New England, Black American children of migrant harvesters, and rural Hindi-speaking Fiji Indian children. Findings suggest that, while repetition, inversion, and escalation are common to all three cultures, there is considerable variation as to how they are used. (EJS)
Descriptors: Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies, Discourse Analysis

Boggs, Stephen T. – Language in Society, 1978
Describes a pattern of verbal disputing frequently engaged in by children in Hawaii who have some Polynesian ancestry. This pattern, which is characterized by the forceful use of "not!" as an outright contradiction of one speaker by another, is traced from early childhood into adolescence in the context of relationships in which it develops. (EJS)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Child Language, Children