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Showing 181 to 195 of 812 results Save | Export
Meier, Gerhard E. H. – IRAL, 1989
Analysis of the structural, semantic, and textual aspects of a corpus of 330 English examples of the postpositive conjunctions "though,""as," and "that" focuses on concessive clauses, clauses of reason, clauses of manner, and clauses with postpositive conjunctions and normal clauses. (CB)
Descriptors: Conjunctions, Distinctive Features (Language), English, Language Patterns
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Hall, D. Goeffrey; Waxman, Sandra R. – Child Development, 1993
In two experiments, preschoolers interpreted a novel count noun applied to an unfamiliar stuffed animal as referring to a basic-level (such as a person or a dog) kind of object rather than to a context (such as a passenger) or a life-phase (such as a puppy) kind of object. (MDM)
Descriptors: Familiarity, Language Acquisition, Language Patterns, Preschool Children
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Menefee, Emory – ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 1992
Compares E-Prime, a form of English that eliminates all forms of the verb "to be," with E-Choice, a form of English eliminating pernicious occurrences of conjugated forms of the verb. Criticizes the use of E-Prime for its difficulty making certain statements and its premise that a mechanical device be substituted for the process of…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Grammar, Higher Education, Language Patterns
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Bourland, D. David, Jr. – ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 1992
Provides the comments of D. David Bourland, Jr., inventor of E-Prime (a form of English that eliminates all forms of the verb "to be"), with regard to the articles included in this special issue. Outlines the meaning and uses of E-Prime. Critiques and discusses several of the issue's different articles. (HB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Grammar, Higher Education, Language Patterns
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Balota, David A.; Cortese, Michael J.; Sergent-Marshall, Susan D.; Spieler, Daniel H.; Yap, Melvin J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2004
Speeded visual word naming and lexical decision performance are reported for 2,428 words for young adults and healthy older adults. Hierarchical regression techniques were used to investigate the unique predictive variance of phonological features in the onsets, lexical variables (e.g., measures of consistency, frequency, familiarity, neighborhood…
Descriptors: Semantics, Familiarity, Young Adults, Word Recognition
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Hillert, Dieter G. – Brain and Language, 2004
The current study examines how patients with aphasia access the meanings of idioms during spoken sentence comprehension. In our experiment, we had 4 subjects whose native language is German: 2 left-hemisphere damaged patients (Wernicke's and global aphasia); 1 right-hemisphere damaged patient; and 1 age-matched healthy speaker. Ambiguous…
Descriptors: Patients, Aphasia, Language Patterns, Sentences
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Micciche, Laura R. – College Composition and Communication, 2004
Rhetorical grammar analysis encourages students to view writing as a material social practice in which meaning is actively made, rather than passively relayed or effortlessly produced. The study of rhetorical grammar can demonstrate to students that language does purposeful, consequential work in the world--work that can be learned and applied.
Descriptors: Literacy, Rhetoric, Grammar, Writing (Composition)
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Matsuo, Ayumi – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2007
This article describes how English and Japanese children interpret empty categories in Verb Phrase Ellipsis contexts as in (1):(1) The penguin [sat on his chair] and the robot did [delta], too. To obtain an adultlike interpretation of (1), English children have to do two things. First, they need to find a suitable antecedent for the empty verb…
Descriptors: Verbs, Semantics, Language Patterns, Japanese
Johnson, Edward A. – 1994
A study investigated the reciprocal relationship between colors and semantic terms--just as certain semantic terms elicit thoughts of particular colors, so those colors may also elicit their reciprocal semantic terms. Twenty-six students were each shown 18 words: 3 each of bipolar pairs that expressed evaluation, activity, or potency. The students…
Descriptors: Color, Communication Research, Higher Education, Language Patterns
Tsujimura, Natsuko – 1989
Two instances of unaccusative verb mismatches in Japanese are examined. An unaccusative mismatch is the situation in which a different accusative diagnostic singles out different classes of intransitive verbs within and across languages. One type of unaccusative mismatch has to do with group C verbs, or verbs of manner with protagonist control.…
Descriptors: Grammar, Japanese, Language Patterns, Language Research
Kliffer, Michael D. – 1990
The concept of grammatical servitude, defined as the absence of semantic choice in linguistic constructions, minimizes dependence on intuition and subjective judgment in syntactic analysis. It also causes the researcher to neglect important communicative resources of the speaker. To remedy this problem, the use of semantics in syntactic analysis…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Grammar, Language Patterns, Linguistic Theory
Leech, Geoffrey N. – 1976
This paper accepts Labov's (1973) criticisms of the categorial approach, i.e., the view that linguistic units are categories which are discrete, invariant, qualitatively distinct, conjunctively defined, and composed of atomic primes, and follows Labov in attempting to develop a non-categorial (or fuzzy-categorial) approach to lexical semantics,…
Descriptors: Definitions, Dictionaries, Evaluation Methods, Language Patterns
Talmy, Leonard – 1970
A child acquiring a language must learn to correctly match the phenomena of the realworld which he perceives with the lexical items and the segregates and perhaps some of the grammatical categories of the language to be learned. He must correlatively learn the organization in meaning of and among these last named elements, that is, the internal…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Patterns, Language Universals, Psycholinguistics
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Glosser, Guila; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1988
This study reports intraindividual variations in the semantic and syntactic complexity of language and in the linguistic errors produced by mildly and moderately impaired adult aphasic subjects (N=10) in different communication contexts. Aphasic patients exhibited at least as many linguistic variations as controls in response to changing…
Descriptors: Adults, Aphasia, Communication Skills, Difficulty Level
Mathias, Gerald B. – Journal-Newsletter of the Association of Teachers of Japanese, 1969
Paper read at the Annual Meeting of the Modern Language Association of America, December 29, 1968, in New York, New York. (DS)
Descriptors: Diagrams, Grammar, Japanese, Language Instruction
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