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Showing 1,081 to 1,095 of 1,545 results Save | Export
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Nilsen, Kelvin Don; Nilsen, Alleen Pace – English Journal, 1995
Suggests that by analyzing the slang and the modifications of English used on computers today, teachers and students stand to learn more about standard English. Examines the literary origins from which many computer words are taken. Explains alternate spellings, acronyms, metaphors, and use of brand names. (TB)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Computer Uses in Education, Computers, Language Styles
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Kantor, Hadassa – Language in Society, 1992
The growing secularization of Israeli lifestyle and the increasing influence of foreign languages as manifested in the local media have given rise to new forms of language secularization. This article discusses and provides examples of the secularization of Hebrew, which has split modern Hebrew into two varieties--religious and secularized. (13…
Descriptors: Diglossia, Hebrew, Language Research, Language Usage
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Simkins-Bullock, Jennifer A.; Wildman, Beth G. – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1991
Observes the impact of gender and status on the communication of 26 same-sex and 13 mixed-sex dyads of college students. Suggests that differences in the use of certain linguistic features may be more a result of a power differential than of gender. Other characteristics of the speaker, however, must also be considered. (CJS)
Descriptors: College Students, Factor Analysis, Interpersonal Communication, Language Usage
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Schreffler, Sandra B. – Southwest Journal of Linguistics, 1994
A study identified second-person singular pronoun usage among Salvadoran speakers living in Houston, Texas, to see what changes, if any, have been caused by contact with other Spanish speakers with different speech patterns. Although the results confirm some linguistic behavior observed by others, some unexpected facts and diverging trends were…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Language Patterns, Language Research, Language Usage
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Zuidema, Leah A. – Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, 2005
People frequently make assumptions about others because of their spoken or written use of a particular dialect or language. The varieties of English that people use are often regarded as indicators of corresponding intelligence, competence, motives, and morality. Such assumptions--frequently based on myths and misconceptions about the nature of…
Descriptors: Literacy Education, Social Bias, Social Discrimination, Language Usage
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Warren, Jane – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 2006
This article examines speakers' perceptions of and attitudes towards address pronoun usage in Paris and Toulouse. The data on which this article is based come from a comparative project based at the University of Melbourne, "Address in some western European languages, and were generated in focus groups in both Paris and Toulouse, as well as…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Focus Groups, Foreign Countries, French
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Wee, Lionel – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2007
The Linguistic Human Rights (LHRs) paradigm is motivated by the desire to combat linguistic discrimination, where speakers of discriminated languages find themselves unable to use their preferred language in society at large. However, in an increasingly globalised world where speakers may feel the need or the desire to travel across state…
Descriptors: Sociolinguistics, Models, Monolingualism, Language Role
Pousada, Alicia; Poplack, Shana – 1979
This study examines quantitatively the systems of tense, mood, and aspect in Puerto Rican Spanish spoken in the United States. In the community under investigation, code-switching is an integral part of the communicative repertoire; also, the codes tend to be switched at points around which the surface structures of Spanish and English map onto…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Contrastive Linguistics, Diachronic Linguistics, Language Research
Shipley, Joseph T. – 1977
Filled with detail and trivia, this book is an informative, nonspecialized, and often humorous consideration of the vitality and variety of the English language. The book examines the origins of language and the history of English; the process of word formation and the origins of words; the problem of jargon; the prevalence of slang; synonyms,…
Descriptors: Diachronic Linguistics, English, Etymology, Language Styles
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Kramer, Cheris – Anthropological Linguistics, 1975
Explores the role of sex of speaker and sex of addressee in determining the appropriateness of forms of address. (AM)
Descriptors: Human Relations, Language Research, Language Styles, Language Usage
Lourie, Margaret A., Ed.; Conklin, Nancy Faires, Ed. – 1978
Readings are presented on the topic of linguistic pluralism in the United States. A section on some speech communities in the United States introduces major American language varieties, and representative studies show the central role of language in the maintenance of community identity. The section on variation within speech communities focuses…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Cultural Pluralism, English (Second Language), Language Planning
British Council, London (England). English-Teaching Information Centre. – 1973
This bibliography is divided into five sections. The second, third, fourth, and fifth sections are each devoted to publications in one specified area, American, Canadian, Australian, and New Zealand English respectively. The first section lists bibliographies pertaining to all of these areas. Entries in all sections include both American and…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Dialect Studies, English, Language Usage
Vesper, Don R.; Vesper, Ethel R. – 1975
This paper discusses the background of the language situation in Guam, comparing the findings of a 1966 survey to the present situation. Apparent changes both in the language situation and in attitudes towards language and some of the causative factors involved in the changes are discussed. The study currently underway, which utilizes informal…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Chamorro, Educational Policy, English
Underwood, Gary N. – 1974
This paper reports on the Arkansas Language Survey, which had two purposes: (1) to explore the idea advanced by Labov that Americans generally have negative attitudes about their language, and to see to what extent this applies to Arkansawyers; and (2) to determine how Arkansawyers judge the way other Americans speak English. The twenty-four white…
Descriptors: Dialect Studies, Language Attitudes, Language Research, Language Usage
Pfaff, Carol W. – 1975
This paper reports on a preliminary quantitative study of syntactic constraints on code-switching within discourses in which no change in participants, setting or topic is evident. The goals of the study are to provide a syntactic description of the points at which switches from Spanish to English and English to Spanish are possible and to assess…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Bilingualism, Code Switching (Language), Dialect Studies
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