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Peer reviewedBlakar, Rolv Mikkel; Rommetveit, Ragnar – Linguistics, 1975
Criticizes psycholinguistic experiments where messages are presented in vacuo and where the linguist has no intention of conveying a message to the subject, who fills in his own contextual frame. When utterances were presented with pictures, they were remembered more accurately than when they were repeated ten times. (SCC)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Patterns, Language Usage, Psycholinguistics
Festgepraegte praedikative Konstruktionen im Deutschen (Idiomatic Predicate Constructions in German)
Reichstein, A. D. – Deutsch als Fremdsprache, 1974
Examines German idiomatic predicate constructions in various aspects; finds that these constructions do not form a homogeneous class, either as to form or as to syntax. Numerous examples, taken from dictionaries and other sources, are used. (Text is in German.) (IFS/WGA)
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Form Classes (Languages), German, Idioms
PDF pending restorationKirsner, Robert S. – 1976
The Dutch deictics are typically given a locative analysis: the adverbial pronoun "hier" ("here") and the demonstrative "deze" ("this") are said to point near the speaker, "daar" ("there") and "die" ("that") to point far, with "er" (weak "there") and the article "de" ("the") left unspecified (Bech 1952:7). The present paper rejects this view,…
Descriptors: Adverbs, Determiners (Languages), Dutch, Language Patterns
Klein, Flora – 1975
The present paper reports on an experiment designed to test the semantic analysis of Spanish mood vs. the traditional analysis in terms of government, by testing preferences for the Present Indicative or the Present Subjunctive following expressions of varying certainty. Two separate tests were conducted, in which subjects were given the option of…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Language Patterns, Language Research, Language Usage
Ginn, Doris O. – 1975
The topic of black dialect, a timely concern in education and society, should include an understanding of the relationship between language and culture and an understanding of the differences within ethnic and environmental influences contributing to linguistic diversity. Characteristics in black dialect which reflect its descent from African…
Descriptors: Black Culture, Black Dialects, Cultural Influences, Language Patterns
Crystal, David; Davy, Derek – 1969
This book, geared particularly toward beginning college and university students, treats style within the framework of general language variation, the discussion focusing chiefly on linguistic differences (both written and spoken) observed in everyday life, rather than on those found in poetry and belles lettres. The discussion is divided between…
Descriptors: English, Language Patterns, Language Styles, Language Usage
Gove, Philip B. – College English, 1966
To understand decisions made concerning language usage in "Webster's Third New International Dictionary," it is necessary to realize what standard usage is and how it changes. The definition of standard usage, given in 1932, as that language used by well-educated persons remains valid and depends more and more on professional writers for guidance.…
Descriptors: Dictionaries, English Instruction, Language Patterns, Language Research
Allen, Doris A. – 1973
The purpose of this study was to describe the function-form relationships in a child's developing language by establishing a methodology for examining the child's early propositions and the predications which express them, identifying the points in the syntactic hierarchy at which different "meanings" are encoded, and investigating the…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns, Language Research
Herbert, Charles Henry, Jr. – 1970
This study was undertaken to determine some of the effects of role change on children's language production. The questions to be answered were: (1) To what degree is the language of a 6th grade child more conplex in the tutor role than it is in the role of student?; (2) Is there a significant difference in the variety of basic language patterns…
Descriptors: Cross Age Teaching, Elementary School Students, Grade 6, Language Patterns
Davison, Alice – 1975
This paper deals with the counterexamples to the general principles that: (1) a sentence as utterance has only one illocutionary force, in the sense of J.L. Austin; and (2) performative verbs do not normally retain illocutionary force in embedded contexts. Various tests for illocutionary force are applied, such as substitution of another speech…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Language Research, Language Usage, Linguistic Theory
Peer reviewedHartig, Matthias – Linguistics, 1976
This paper examines language variation in terms of overdetermination and underdetermination of structural information as related to grammatical rules and the structure of social behavior. (CLK)
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Usage, Language Variation
Peer reviewedLadd, D. Robert, Jr. – Language, 1978
This articles discusses intonation in terms of different kinds of contours and demonstrates the inadequacy of any approach to English intonation which treats contours as sequences of significant pitch levels. (NCR)
Descriptors: Intonation, Language Patterns, Language Usage, Linguistic Theory
Peer reviewedYamamoto, Akira Y. – Anthropological Linguistics, 1977
Presents a case study in which the use of intricate varieties of levels of honorifics in Japanese is more complicated than traditional sociolinguistics has shown. The buraku (Japanese barrio) treated here is situated in the west part of Honshu, Japan, and consists of 13 households. (CHK)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Japanese, Language Patterns, Language Research
Peer reviewedBridgeland, William M. – College Student Journal, 1977
The third person singular pronouns are either neuter or sex linked even in situations where they should be neutral. When the sex is unknown then a substitute, for example "heesh" should be used. The present paper examines several of these awkward words and makes recommendations for substitutes. (Author)
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Language Patterns, Language Usage, Models
Peer reviewedSinsabaugh, Barbara A.; Fox, Robert Allen – Communication Monographs, 1986
Critically reevaluates data obtained using the Spoonerisms of Laboratory Induced Predisposition (SLIP) paradigm. Discusses how the results from three studies that utilized this experimental technique differed from those in the original study. Suggests that many of the speech errors detected result from confusion rather from the elicitation of true…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Evaluation Problems, Language Patterns


