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Hosie, Peter; Schibeci, Renato – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2005
A review is undertaken of what different commentators have written about the evaluation of educational courseware in higher education. Speculation is made on the reasons for the lack of such evaluations. The role of checklists for evaluating online courseware is discussed despite the acknowledged limitations. Checklists have been developed at…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Higher Education, Check Lists, Online Courses
Vigliocco, Gabriella; Vinson, David P.; Siri, Simona – Cognition, 2005
Italian speakers were asked to name pictures of actions (e.g. "bere", to drink). Pictures were presented at the same time as distracter words that were semantically related or unrelated to the picture names, and were of the same or different grammatical class (verbs or nouns). Half of the participants named the actions as verbs in citation form,…
Descriptors: Semantics, Grammar, Italian, Pictorial Stimuli
Alexiadou, Artemis; Stavrakaki, Stavroula – Brain and Language, 2006
In this paper, we investigate the performance of a Greek-English bilingual patient with Broca's aphasia and mild agrammatism on the placement of CP, MoodP, AspectP, and NegP-related adverbs, labeled specifier-type adverbs, and VP-related adverbs, labeled complement-type adverbs, by means of a constituent ordering task and a grammaticality judgment…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Bilingualism, Patients, Aphasia
Andery, M. A.; Micheletto, N.; Serio, T. M. – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2005
This paper explores the historical development of Skinner's treatment of meaning from 1930 to 1957. Twelve papers published between 1934 and 1957, and parts of "The Behavior of Organisms and Science and Human Behavior" related to verbal behavior, were analyzed. Before 1945 meaning was taken as a property of the verbal response, and from 1945 on,…
Descriptors: Speech, Behavior, Responses, Social Scientists
Sinclair, Margaret – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2002
Throughout "Coriolanus", the third person "shall" appears primarily as a modal auxiliary: combined with another verb, it indicates the speaker's mood or attitude toward the person or thing that (s)he speaks about. This essay looks at one of the tribunes' use of "shall" in the third person and how it reveals the…
Descriptors: Verbs, Political Power, Language Usage, Grammar
Morgan, Gary; Herman, Rosalind; Woll, Bencie – Journal of Child Language, 2002
This study focuses on the mapping of events onto verb-argument structures in British Sign Language (BSL). The development of complex sentences in BSL is described in a group of 30 children, aged 3;2-12;0, using data from comprehension measures and elicited sentence production. The findings support two interpretations: firstly, in the mapping of…
Descriptors: Sign Language, Children, Sentence Structure, Form Classes (Languages)
Narasimhan, Bhuvana; Gullberg, Marianne – Journal of Child Language, 2006
Children are able to take multiple perspectives in talking about entities and events. But the nature of children's sensitivities to the complex patterns of perspective-taking in adult language is unknown. We examine perspective-taking in four- and six-year-old Tamil-speaking children describing placement events, as reflected in the use of a…
Descriptors: Semantics, Form Classes (Languages), Child Language, Language Acquisition
Deen, Kamil Ud – Journal of Child Language, 2006
Schaeffer (1997, 2000) argues that children lack knowledge of specificity because Dutch children omit determiners and fail to scramble pronouns. Avrutin & Brun (2001), however, find that Russian children place arguments correctly according to whether they are specific or non-specific. This paper investigates object agreement and specificity in…
Descriptors: African Languages, Language Research, Form Classes (Languages), Child Language
Hall, D. Geoffrey; Belanger, Julie – Developmental Science, 2005
An important source of information about a new word's meaning (and its associated lexical class) is its range of reference: the number of objects to which it is extended. Ninety toddlers (mean age = 37 months) participated in a study to determine whether young children can use this information in word learning. When a novel word was presented with…
Descriptors: Toys, Cues, Form Classes (Languages), Toddlers
Pynte, Joel – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2006
The role of prosodic phrasing in sentence comprehension was investigated by means of three different tasks, namely auditory word monitoring (Experiment 1), self-paced reading (Experiment 2) and cross-modal comparison (Experiment 3). In all three experiments a critical prosodic unit or frame comprising a determiner, a noun and a Prepositional…
Descriptors: Syntax, Suprasegmentals, Nouns, Form Classes (Languages)
O'Connell, Daniel C.; Kowal, Sabine – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2005
Starting from our recent findings regarding emotional and initializing functions of interjections in TV and radio interviews (Kowal & O'Connell, 2004b; O'Connell & Kowal, in press; O'Connell, Kowal, & Ageneau, 2005), we used the book and script of Shaw (1916/1969) and the audiotape of the motion picture (Pascal, Asquith, & Howard, 1938) Pygmalion…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Drama, Twentieth Century Literature, Psycholinguistics
Conti-Ramsden, Gina – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2003
Thirty-two 5-year-old children with specific language impairment (SLI) and 32 chronological age (CA) controls completed 4 tasks that were considered potential positive markers for SLI. Children's performance on 2 linguistic tasks (past tense and noun plurals task) and 2 processing tasks (nonword repetition and digit recall) were examined. This…
Descriptors: Age, Form Classes (Languages), Linguistics, Language Impairments
Valiquette, Christine; Gerin-Lajoie, Anne-Marie; Sutton, Ann – Child Language Teaching and Therapy, 2006
A tool was devised to improve spoken syntax through manipulation of graphic symbols. The participant, a French-speaking 11-year-old girl with general learning disability, learned to produce subject-verb-object (SVOn) sentences and transform them into a subject-object-verb (SOpV) structure in which the object becomes pronominal in a preverbal…
Descriptors: Visual Aids, Sentence Structure, Speech, Form Classes (Languages)
Brown, Kim – Teaching Pre K-8, 2004
The mere mention of a grammar lesson can set students' eyes rolling. The fun activities described in this article can turn those blank looks into smiles. Here, the author presents grammar games namely: (1) noun tennis; (2) the minister's cat; (3) kids take action; (4) what's my adverb?; (5) and then I saw...; and (6) grammar sing-along.
Descriptors: Grammar, Nouns, Form Classes (Languages), Verbs
Roll, Mikael; Frid, Johan; Horne, Merle – Language and Speech, 2007
Hesitation disfluencies after phonetically prominent stranded function words are thought to reflect the cognitive coding of complex structures. Speech fragments following the Swedish function word "att" "that" were analyzed syntactically, and divided into two groups: one with "att" in disfluent contexts, and the other with "att" in fluent…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Componential Analysis, Swedish, Computational Linguistics

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