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Shanker, S. G. – Language and Communication, 1991
Responds to a previous article suggesting that the grammatical mode of communication arose via natural selection. It is suggested that the greatest challenge posed by this theory is the evolution of a new approach to the origin of language. (JL)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Diachronic Linguistics, Grammar, Language Universals
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Mejias-Bikandi, Errapel – Hispania, 1998
Examination of the behavior of different types of Spanish complements in two different grammatical constructions supports the argument that behavior differences result from the complement's different pragmatic status. Empirical evidence supports the hypothesis that complements representing old information appear in the subjunctive mood. The notion…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Usage
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Hamann, Cornelia; Plunkett, Kim – Cognition, 1998
Examined data for two Danish children to determine subject omission, verb usage, and sentence subjects. Found that children exhibit asymmetry in subject omission according to verb type as subjects are omitted from main verb utterances more frequently than from copula utterances. Concluded that treatment of child subject omission should involve…
Descriptors: Danish, Language Acquisition, Preschool Children, Sentence Structure
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Bao, Zhiming; Wee, Lionel – World Englishes, 1999
Presents an analysis of the two passive (or passive-like) constructions in Singapore English which exhibit substrate influence from Malay and Chinese. The paper shows that while substrate languages contribute to the grammar of Singapore English, the continued prestige of standard English exerts normative pressure and mitigates the effect of…
Descriptors: Chinese, Dialects, English, Foreign Countries
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Osakwe, Mabel I. – World Englishes, 1999
Examines features that make Wole Soyinka's poems bilingual and bicultural. Four linguistic strategies revealing features used in Yoruba poetic discourse are identified across Soyinka's four anthologies: literal translation, creative translation, transference, and stylistic translation. The study reveals that the native language and literary…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Cultural Influences, English, Foreign Countries
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Ting, Jen – Journal of East Asian Linguistics, 1998
Proposes that the bei-construction, a Mandarin Chinese passive construction, is not derived uniformly, but rather, three types of bei-sentences must be recognized. Presents basic facts about bei-construction; shows consistent structural differences between bei-sentences with and without the lexical logical subject, discussing A-dependency and…
Descriptors: Grammar, Mandarin Chinese, Regional Dialects, Sentence Structure
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Kay, Paul; Fillmore, Charles J. – Language, 1999
Uses a detailed analysis of a single grammatical problem to present the principal commitments and mechanisms of a grammatical theory that assigns a central role to the notion of grammatical construction. The grammatical phenomenon used to introduce construction grammar is the construction that licenses the surprising syntactic and semantic…
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Usage, Linguistic Theory, Semantics
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McCawley, James D. – Language, 1999
Examines parallelisms between surface structure and logical structure and why those parallelisms do not extend farther than they do. If syntactic deep structures are identified with logical structures, an appropriate cyclic principle guarantees that cyclic rules will apply so that large-scale parallelisms exist between surface syntactic structures…
Descriptors: Grammar, Logic, Sentence Structure, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
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Kellerman, Eric; Yoshioka, Kaoru – Second Language Research, 1999
Responds to Kanno's article (see FL 528 536), which described studies of adult American learners of Japanese and their knowledge of two universal grammar (UG) principles and noted various lateral inconsistencies. This commentary suggests that another form of lateral inconsistency, arising from failure to replicate Kanno's findings in another adult…
Descriptors: Adults, Grammar, Japanese, Language Universals
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Romaine, Suzanne – Language, 1999
Discusses grammaticalization of "laik" in Tok Pisin, meaning "want/like/desire" (from English "like") and "klostu," meaning "near" (from English "close to") as markers of proximative. Shows although "klostu" was more generally a feature of Pacific Pidgin English and began to…
Descriptors: Creoles, Diachronic Linguistics, Foreign Countries, Grammar
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Gomez, Rebecca L.; Gerken, LouAnn – Cognition, 1999
This study utilized the head-turn preference procedure in four experiments to determine whether 1-year-old infants could extract and remember information from auditory strings produced by miniature artificial grammar. Findings indicated that subjects generalized to the new structure by discriminating new grammatical strings from ungrammatical ones…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Grammar, Infants, Language Acquisition
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Carston, Robyn – Language & Communication, 2000
Suggests that, although pragmatic theory is like grammatical theory in that it seeks full explicitness and is pitched at the level of subpersona systems, it is unlike grammatical theory in that it is an account of performance mechanisms rather than of knowledge systems (competence). (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Generative Grammar, Interpersonal Competence, Linguistic Theory
Archard, Michel – Journal of Intensive English Studies, 1997
Seeks to (1) show that the particular form of the model used to represent linguistic production has important consequences for the goals and practices of second-language acquisition research, and (2) that the theoretical model of Cognitive Grammar represents a valid framework for the investigation of second-language acquisition. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Grammar, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
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Briscoe, Ted – Language, 2000
An account of grammatical acquisition is developed within the parameter setting framework applied to a generalized categorical grammar (GCG). Computational simulation shows that several resulting acquisition procedures are effective on a parameter set expressing major typological distinctions based on constituent order, and defining 70 distinct…
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, Grammar, Language Acquisition, Language Typology
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Veland, Reidar – Journal of French Language Studies, 1998
An analysis of the French construction in which a passive is followed by a simple infinitive (e.g., "Paul a ete prie de sortir"), which language purists claim does not exist in French, suggests an account similar to the passivization of verbs without direct object. Three verb groups are considered: verbs of perception, opinion, and…
Descriptors: French, Grammar, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
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