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Showing 1,126 to 1,140 of 1,545 results Save | Export
Soudek, Lev I.; Soudek, Miluse – 1984
Current practices and materials for teaching English as a second language (ESL) contain oversimplifications about English based on the assumption of a uniform language type and standard of usage, presented to foreign learners for pedagogical clarity. ESL teachers may be aware of the language's diversity but are not prepared to provide…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Dialects, English (Second Language), Language Styles
McClure, Erica F. – 1977
This paper examines the formal and functional properties of code-switching among Mexican-American children. Two formal types of code-switching, code-mixing and code-changing, are identified, and developmental patterns in their use are discussed. Two major functional types of code-switching are also differentiated. The first, situational…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Children, Elementary Education
Hood, Lois – 1977
This paper examines aspects of variation in child language, and specifically how children express causal relations in complex sentences. Four particular types of variation were observed: (1) the order of clauses and the connectives used to link clauses; (2) mothers' causal statements; (3) interaction of language form and content, in the form of…
Descriptors: Child Language, Descriptive Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Greenbaum, Sidney – TESOL Quarterly, 1975
Attitude and use in language do not always coincide. The foreign language teacher should be aware of language variation so that he can decide what forms to teach and when to introduce variants. Several generalizations about variation and acceptability in language are made. (Author/ND)
Descriptors: Language Instruction, Language Styles, Language Teachers, Language Usage
Barnett, George A. – 1979
An experiment was conducted to investigate the nature of synonyms by using multidimensional scaling. The selected concept was "pig" and three of its synonyms--"hog,""boar," and "swine." These terms vary in their frequency of use in English, which makes it possible to explore a behaviorally based theory of…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Higher Education, Language Attitudes, Language Research
Menzel, Peter; Tyler, Mary – 1977
As Labov points out (1971), language is a social phenomenon, and therefore must be studied in its social context; sex based language differences, being part of language, must be studied in the same way. Specifically, sex based language differences can be studied by modifying the sociolinguists' notion of speech community and speech continuum, and…
Descriptors: Females, Language Patterns, Language Research, Language Styles
Huebner, Thomas G. – 1976
Linguists of various theoretical backgrounds have likened second language (L2) acquisition to pidginization (Ferguson 1971, Richards 1971, Bickerton 1975a). This paper examines these two processes and suggests areas where a study of the process of second language acquisition in a natural setting might contribute insights to a general theory of…
Descriptors: Creoles, Language Patterns, Language Research, Language Skills
Belcher, Mary S. – 1973
Eighty disadvantaged black third grade students were administered both reading achievement and oral language tests to determine whether the phonology, morphology, and grammar of Black English dialect have more effect on the below-average readers of the group than on those students making satisfactory reading progress. Student scores on the…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Disadvantaged Youth, Language Usage
Laygo, Teresito M., Comp. – 1977
This document presents some of the issues involved in deciding on a national language for the Philippines. It is noted that the Philippines needs a national language which would be accepted by most of the forty-five million Filipinos. If the trend continues for the next five years and if the trend in the Philippines to shift Pilipino (the national…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Filipino Americans, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns
Lavandera, Beatriz R. – 1977
The nature of linguistic variation is examined, particularly the ways in which phonology, morphology, syntax, and other aspects of language vary according to social and situational contexts. A distinction must be made between a difference in frequency of a linguistic variable that carries meaning, and a difference in frequency which carries no…
Descriptors: Language Styles, Language Usage, Language Variation, Linguistic Theory
Wright, Richard Louis – 1976
This study examines linguistic form and communication style in working-class and middle-class black preachers of two types: those who are not seminary trained, who preach spontaneously, and those who are seminary trained, who read from a prepared text. Ten sermons were tape-recorded in natural settings at two churches in Washington, D.C. Analyses…
Descriptors: Adults, Black Dialects, Clergy, Doctoral Dissertations
Mickelson, Norma I. – 1975
In order to achieve literacy, children must have mastered the decoding and encoding processes of the language of instruction. Usually this has been accomplished long before the child enters school. However, if the child's language is atypical for any reason, such as cultural or linguistic factors, then the acquisition of literacy requires a…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Classroom Environment, Elementary Education, Language Usage
Ross, John – 1974
The aim of this paper is to clear up some of the confusion that has developed around interpretations of Bernstein's concept of code-distribution. After a rapid review of the main dimensions of linguistic variation within a given society, with particular attention to sociolectal and register variation, 'codes' are examined and compared with…
Descriptors: Language Classification, Language Instruction, Language Styles, Language Usage
Shuy, Roger W. – 1975
Knowledge about how language works is often considered superfluous by the public. In general, the public image of language is that language is in a serious decline and that outside influences on language have led it astray, views that are supported by false assumptions about language on the part of writers. Writers in newspapers and magazines note…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Black Dialects, Dialects, Language Standardization
Cooper, Barry – 1975
This paper is primarily concerned with Basil Bernstein's sociolinguistic account of school failure. The first section describes some earlier work relevant to his theories. In the second section, Bernstein's sociolinguistic codes thesis is described, and an attempt is made to show that it suffers from the merging of two logically distinct strands…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Failure
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