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Peer reviewedVogel, Susan A. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1983
Morphological ability performance of 20 learning disabled (LD) and 20 normal seven- to eight-year-old boys on the Berry-Talbott Language Test of Comprehension of Grammar yielded the major findings that the LD boys did not differ significantly from normals on item categories ranked by difficulty level. (Author/MC)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Grammar, Language Acquisition, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedZorfass, Judith M. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1981
Presents study which explored metalinguistic abilities of prelingually deaf children who are users of Signed English with regard to their explicit segmentation of Signed English sentences into words. Subjects exhibited varying abilities that increased with age and were similar to developmental patterns in hearing populations. (Author/BK)
Descriptors: Deafness, Language Research, Morphemes, Sentence Structure
Peer reviewedCorbin, Danielle – Langue Francaise, 1976
Discusses French morphology and shows that the rules at this level of linguistic analysis are particularly susceptible to having exceptions. The irregularities are grouped into three types: 1) idiosyncrasies, 2) accidental gaps, and 3) the existence of non-productive processes. (Text is in French.) (TL)
Descriptors: French, Grammar, Linguistic Theory, Morphemes
Peer reviewedBrown, Becky – Journal of Sociolinguistics, 2003
Analyzes bilingual lexemes and morphemes of English-origin loanwords from a Louisiana corpus of 22 French/English speakers. Data suggest that examining borrowing beyond the word level reveals a highly complex interplay of often competing and overlapping grammars. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Code Switching (Language), English, French
Peer reviewedNilsen, Alleen Pace; Nilsen, Don L. F. – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2002
Considers that the comparison between children's success in learning new names in the Harry Potter books versus the relative failure of adults to learn new names connected to the September 11th attacks provides a real-world situation from which principles can be deduced to help educators succeed in teaching vocabulary lessons. Offers classroom…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Innovation, Language Patterns
Peer reviewedParadis, Johanne; Crago, Martha – Language Acquisition, 2001
Examines the use of tense, agreement, and non-tense morphemes and associated distributional contingencies in the language production of Quebec French-Speaking children with specific language impairment and normally developing language and age-matched controls. Sought to determine whether the optimal infinitive/extended optional infinitive pattern…
Descriptors: Children, Developmental Stages, English, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedBlevins, Juliette – Language, 1993
Argues for underlying tones as opposed to accentual diacritics or metrical representations in Standard Lithuanian nominals. Support for tonal representations come from analyses of (1) the general status of diacritic accents, (2) tonal stability under segment-deletion and demorification in Lithuanian, and (3) data from a Zhemayt dialect. (Contains…
Descriptors: Diacritical Marking, Dialects, Language Research, Lexicology
Peer reviewedBellaire, Stacy; And Others – Journal of Communication Disorders, 1994
This study found that 10 children (ages 9-10) with language impairments showed significant differences from 10 children with normal language in English bound-morpheme skill levels, ability to generalize English bound-morphemes to novel words, and ability to learn novel bound-morphemes attached to novel words. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Generalization, Intermediate Grades, Language Impairments, Language Skills
Peer reviewedLeonard, Laurence B.; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1992
Evaluation of the speech perception of eight children (ages four and five) with specific language impairments and documented morphological difficulties found these children to be especially weak in discriminating speech stimuli whose contrastive portions had shorter durations than the noncontrastive portions (typical of English grammatical…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Grammar, Language Handicaps, Listening Comprehension
Grammatical Morpheme Acquisition in 4-Year-Olds with Normal, Impaired, and Late-Developing Language.
Peer reviewedPaul, Rhea; Alforde, Sally – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1993
Production of grammatical morphemes was examined in free speech samples from 34 4-year-olds with history of slow expressive language development (SELD) and control group. Both the SELD children who had caught up in mean length of utterance by age four and those who had not had acquired fewer grammatical morphemes than controls, though acquisition…
Descriptors: Delayed Speech, Developmental Stages, Expressive Language, Grammar
Peer reviewedAnglin, Jeremy M. – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1993
Tested children in grades one, three, and five on their knowledge of a large sample of words. Found that comprehension of derived words improved dramatically from grade one to grade five and that words consisting of more than two morphemes were not well known by first graders but were relatively better known by fifth graders. (BC)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Morphemes, Morphology (Languages)
Peer reviewedMiller, George A.; Wakefield, Pamela C. – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1993
Comments on the research by Anglin reported in this monograph by considering two points. First, discusses possible problems in defining what a word is. Second, examines some problems with the methodology in vocabulary development research that involves testing individuals' knowledge of words by sampling words from dictionaries. (BC)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Dictionaries, Morphemes, Morphology (Languages)
Peer reviewedMarslen-Wilson, William; And Others – Psychological Review, 1994
Six experiments involving 155 adults studied whether lexical entry for derivationally suffixed and prefixed words is morphologically structured, and how this relates to the semantic and phonological relationship between stem and affix. Results with 155 adults suggest that the morpheme is the basic unit in which the lexicon is organized. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adults, Analysis of Variance, Cognitive Processes, English
Peer reviewedSantelmann, Lynn M.; Jusczyk, Peter W. – Cognition, 1998
Five experiments examined 15- and 18-month olds' sensitivity to morphosyntactic dependencies. Results indicated that 18-month olds, but not 15-month olds, were sensitive to basic relationship between "is" and "-ing" and that 18-month-olds could track relationships between functor morphemes. Findings were consistent with hypothesis that 18-month…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, English, Infant Behavior
Peer reviewedFrancis, Elaine J. – Language Sciences, 1998
Shows that looking at individual semantic functions of grammatical morphemes is essential to explaining particular cases of noniconicity between lexical categories and their discourse functions. It is suggested that, in light of this importance of the functions of individual grammatical morphemes, it is now easier to evaluate why…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English, Grammar, Morphemes


