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Darley, Frederic L.; and others – J Speech Hearing Res, 1969
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Exceptional Child Research, Language Patterns, Language Rhythm
Peer reviewedEllis, Yvette – Journal of French Language Studies, 1997
Using extracts from a corpus of naturally occurring French conversation, this study examines how the collaborative construction of episodes of shared laughter contributes to the achievement of affiliation between interlocutors. Results show that how laughter is initiated, where it is placed, and who joins in are significant to the task of…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries, French, Interaction
Peer reviewedCummins, George M., III – Slavic and East European Journal, 1995
Focuses on the highly developed nominal inflection of literary Czech and its resistance to innovation. This study addresses the status of morphological variation in the contemporary language. The stubborn survival of "e" in a mass of older Slavic vocabulary in Czech is clearly no invention of the national revivalists and grammarians of the last…
Descriptors: Czech, Czech Literature, Idioms, Language Patterns
Peer reviewedNespor, Marina; Vogel, Irene – Phonology, 1989
Examines syllable-timed languages (Catalan, Greek, Italian) and stress-timed languages (English, Polish) to show that, in regard to rhythm, both categories behave similarly in several crucial areas. In both language types, the ideal rhythmic pattern involves a separation of stresses and the elimination of clashes. (33 references) (JL)
Descriptors: English, Greek, Italian, Language Patterns
Peer reviewedFletcher, James – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1993
Two studies on the rhythmical patterns of eye movements during reading, displayed by adolescents with reading disabilities and by undergraduates without reading disabilities, revealed that subjects with reading disabilities exhibited rhythm variability, unpredictability, and lethargic tempos; and subjects who were primed exhibited improved parsing…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Higher Education, Language Patterns, Language Rhythm
Keller, Eric; Zellner, Brigitte – York Papers in Linguistics, 1996
A three-tiered statistical model for predicting the temporal structure of French, as produced by a single, highly fluent subject at a fast speech rate, is outlined. The first tier models segmental influences due to phoneme type and contextual interactions between phoneme types. The second tier models syllable-level influences of lexical versus…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, French, Language Fluency, Language Patterns
Sieqman, Aron W., Ed.; Feldstein, Stanley, Ed. – 1979
The temporal patterning of speech, primarily within the context of interpersonal exchanges, is traced in this cross-section of research exploring the major directions such studies have taken. Eighteen authors contributed selections to support the thesis that time as a dimension of speech reflects many of the important processes that occur during…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Individual Characteristics, Interpersonal Relationship, Language Patterns
Lyford, Roland Hazen – 1968
Structural linguistic techniques were utilized to categorize the grammatical elements employed by Robert Frost in 46 blank-verse poems. Nineteen main grammatical categories and 26 verb sub-categories based on distinctive selection criteria were devised to examine the range and distribution of Frost's grammatical patterns. Five control poems by E.…
Descriptors: Function Words, Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Rhythm
Peer reviewedSorensen, John M.; And Others – Cognition, 1978
Five experiments examined how the duration of a word spoken in a sentence is influenced by the grammatical category to which it belongs, and the position of the word in a constituent. The findings indicated that a binary distinction between major and minor categories is sufficient for a theory of speech timing and synthesis. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Deep Structure, Form Classes (Languages), Higher Education
Peer reviewedScanlan, Timothy – Foreign Language Annals, 1987
Reviews the different categories of native pauses and describes techniques for incorporating them cautiously into the spoken French of anglophones (especially Americans), suggesting that proper pause behavior is actually a definite mark of authentic sounding and well-controlled speech. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Communicative Competence (Languages), French, Language Fluency
Peer reviewedTurner, Ronald C. – Linguistics, 1974
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, Language Patterns, Language Rhythm, Literary Criticism
Peer reviewedvon Raffler Engel, W.; Sigelman, C. K. – Language Sciences, 1971
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Cultural Differences, Language Acquisition, Language Fluency
Peer reviewedGundel, Ted – Unterrichtspraxis, 1978
A German lyric poetry course is described which is designed to convey to the student what it means to confront a poem. A poem is viewed as a design whose elements are based on general linguistic phenomena either directly or indirectly, and poetic language is linked with everyday verbal communication. (SW)
Descriptors: College Language Programs, Figurative Language, German Literature, Higher Education
Tice, Bradley S. – 1997
Metrical phonology, a linguistic process of phonological stress assessment and diagrammatic simplification of sentence and word stress, is discussed as it is found in the English and German languages. The objective is to promote use of metrical phonology as a tool for enhancing instruction in stress patterns in words and sentences, particularly in…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, English, German, Language Patterns
Peer reviewedDillon, J. T. – Instructional Science, 1983
Briefly reviews psycholinguistic research, describes six categories of utterance, and reports on research into the relationship between level of thought and length of speech. Results indicate that both teachers and students take successively longer to express higher-cognitive types of utterances. (EAO)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Language Patterns


