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Discourse Processes | 147 |
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Riggenbach, Heidi – Discourse Processes, 1991
Explores the speech of six nonnative speakers of English to achieve a greater understanding of what comprises fluency. Suggests that fluency is a complex, high-order linguistic phenomenon, and that the intuitive judgments about fluency level may take into account a wide range of linguistic phenomena. (SR)
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Language Research, Second Languages

Gee, Julie; Savasir, Iskender – Discourse Processes, 1985
Describes a study of the use of the terms "will" and "gonna" in the speech of two three-year-old girls. The results suggest that one of the functions of "will" and "gonna" is to impart different causal relations to the two practices of "undertaking" and "planning." (HTH)
Descriptors: Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Language Research, Language Usage

Gibbs, Raymond W., Jr. – Discourse Processes, 1986
Describes the results of two studies indicating that people do not ordinarily process the complete literal or compositional interpretations of idiomatic expressions, and that people are automatically biased toward interpreting such language as idioms before deriving their intended literal meanings. (HTH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, Figurative Language, Higher Education

Prinz, Philip M.; Prinz, Elisabeth A. – Discourse Processes, 1985
Describes discourse development in the sign language of 24 profoundly deaf children. Findings indicate children were acquiring appropriate discourse strategies comparable to those used by hearing children in spoken conversations and adult deaf signers. (DF)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Deafness, Discourse Analysis, Elementary Education

Bellman, Kirstie; And Others – Discourse Processes, 1983
Examines the nature of American Sign Language, indicates its intricate morphological structure, and demonstrates one experimental way of uncovering and validating this structure. (FL)
Descriptors: Adults, American Sign Language, Discourse Analysis, Language Research

Fine, J.; Bartolucci, G. – Discourse Processes, 1981
Reviews the methodological issues raised by previous research into the language used by thought-disordered and nondisordered schizophrenics. (FL)
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Language Handicaps, Language Research, Language Skills

Corsaro, William A. – Discourse Processes, 1983
Suggests that children's use of social scripts for the production of sustained dialog in peer interaction depends on the nature of role play and that their attempts at script expansion are precursors to adults' recognition of the potential of conversation for self-expression. (FL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Interaction, Language Acquisition

Spooren, Wilbert – Discourse Processes, 1997
Analyzes different strategies used by speakers/writers and hearers/readers to deal with underspecified coherence relations, phrased in terms of Horn's (1984) Q- and R- principle. Presents data from the psycholinguistic literature on the interpretation of underspecified relations and data from language-acquisition research suggesting that both…
Descriptors: Coherence, Discourse Analysis, Language Acquisition, Language Processing

Gee, James Paul; Kegl, Judy Anne – Discourse Processes, 1983
Examines the narrative story structure of a short American Sign Language narrative using stylistic analysis plus the structure of pausing in the narrative. (FL)
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Discourse Analysis, Language, Language Research

Longacre, Robert E. – Discourse Processes, 1989
Uses eight languages in five distinct linguistic areas to examine two hypotheses regarding text generation and analysis and to illustrate their reciprocity relative to narrative discourse. Demonstrates how these hypotheses yield salience schemes and constituent analysis which mutually corroborate and correct each other. (KEH)
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Discourse Modes

McClure, Erica; Geva, Esther – Discourse Processes, 1983
Concludes that by grade four children have mastered the basic intrasentential use of both "but" and "although." Adds that not even by grade eight do children display knowledge of the intersentential rule of focus governing adult use of these conjunctions. (FL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cohesion (Written Composition), Discourse Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education

Mazzie, Claudia A. – Discourse Processes, 1987
Indicates that the main determinant of implicitness, when defined in terms of "inferrable" vs. "evoked" information, was the variable of content, not that of modality: Abstract texts contained more inferrable information than did narrative texts, regardless of modality. (NKA)
Descriptors: Context Clues, Discourse Analysis, Language Research, Oral Language

De Temple, Jeanne M.; And Others – Discourse Processes, 1991
Investigates the extent of variation in children's language performance in a picture description task arising from mode (oral or written) versus degree of demand for decontextualization. Finds that children manipulated the wide range of the oral form of the contextualized/decontextualized continuum more skillfully than the written form. Finds no…
Descriptors: Children, Elementary Education, Family Environment, Language Research

Pellegrini, Anthony D. – Discourse Processes, 1986
Presents results of a study indicating that constructive and dramatic play contexts affected language to the extent that children use more exophora in the constructive context and more linguistic verbs, third-person pronouns, and displaced reference tenses in the dramatic context. (HTH)
Descriptors: Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Dramatic Play, Language Research

Bennett, Adrian – Discourse Processes, 1981
Discusses the process of understanding of intent by which participants, through the comparative interpretation of a series of cues and symbols as they are revealed in speech, develop categories for a contextual model of communication. Argues that discourse is essentially dialogic and phenomenologically realizable. (FL)
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Discourse Analysis, Language Research, Language Usage