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Botvinick, Matthew; Bylsma, Lauren M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Previous research has shown that short-term memory for serial order can be influenced by background knowledge concerning regularities of sequential structure. Specifically, it has been shown that recall is superior for sequences that fit well with familiar sequencing constraints. The authors report a corresponding effect pertaining to serial…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Short Term Memory, Prior Learning, Sequential Learning
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Farmer, Frank – Written Communication, 2005
This article examines the dialectical nature of Mikhail Bakhtin's developmental understanding of language learning. In particular, the author discusses the pedagogically illuminating relationship between literary style and everyday style, especially as the latter emerges from and returns to lived life. Drawing parallels with other related…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Literary Styles, Language Styles, Creative Activities
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Muter, Valerie; Hulme, Charles; Snowling, Margaret J.; Stevenson, Jim – Developmental Psychology, 2004
The authors present the results of a 2-year longitudinal study of 90 British children beginning at school entry when they were 4 years 9 months old (range = 4 years 2 months to 5 years 2 months). The relationships among early phonological skills, letter knowledge, grammatical skills, and vocabulary knowledge were investigated as predictors of word…
Descriptors: Early Reading, Phonemes, Grammar, Word Recognition
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Collins, Steve; Bissell, Kimberly – Community College Journal of Research and Practice, 2004
Proper grammar is crucial for effective communication. Two surveys of students in an introductory writing course sought to identify predictors of grammar ability. Students demonstrated a limited grasp of the language, struggling with such issues as the distinction between "it's" and "its." Women performed better than men at the beginning of the…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, College Students, Higher Education, Self Efficacy
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Toth, Paul D. – Modern Language Journal, 2004
This article compares ordinary conversational topics and targeted second language (L2) forms for their effectiveness in building and maintaining classroom discourse cohesion. In this study, 16 learners participated in 2 lessons, 1 with teacher turns determined by a grammatical object of instruction, and the other with turns determined by…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Grammar, Discourse Analysis, Connected Discourse
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Rosa, Elena M.; Leow, Ronald P. – Modern Language Journal, 2004
This study examined whether exposure to second/foreign language (L2) data under different computerized task conditions had a differential impact on learners' ability to recognize and produce the target structure immediately after exposure to the input and over time. Learners' L2 development was assessed through recognition and…
Descriptors: Feedback, Computer Assisted Instruction, Spanish, Second Language Learning
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Massone, Maria Ignacia; Curiel, Monica – Sign Language Studies, 2004
This article focuses on word order - the order of constituents in the sentence - as one way in which languages establish the relationship between a verb and its arguments. The spoken languages of the world have been classified into three, major word-order types: SVO, VSO, and SOV. Greenberg' work (1963) on language typology has been a stimulus to…
Descriptors: Semantics, Structural Analysis (Linguistics), Sentence Structure, Language Research
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Ladegaard, Hans J.; Bleses, Dorthe – International Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2003
Sociolinguistic studies have found that female speakers prefer standard speech forms, while male speakers prefer vernacular forms. Examines when this split between male and female language occurs in the language of young children, and looks at how little boys and girls come to prefer linguistic features that are predominant in the language of…
Descriptors: Danish, Foreign Countries, Language Acquisition, Morphology (Languages)
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Han, Kelly – Educational Perspectives, 2006
Pronouns take the place of other nouns. In the case of personal pronouns, they often take the place of nouns that identify persons. The pronoun highlights the difference by being formed differently, and by being placed in different spots in the sentences. Pronouns point out the differences as they change form, and vary their representational…
Descriptors: Sentences, Nouns, Literacy, Teaching Methods
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Rigalleau, Francois; Baudiffier, Vanessa; Caplan, David – Brain and Language, 2004
Three French-speaking agrammatic aphasics and three French-speaking Conduction aphasics were tested for comprehension of Active, Passive, Cleft-Subject, Cleft-Object, and Cleft-Object sentences with Stylistic Inversion using an object manipulation test. The agrammatic patients consistently reversed thematic roles in the latter sentence type, and…
Descriptors: Sentence Structure, Structural Analysis (Linguistics), Grammar, Aphasia
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Tabor, Whitney; Galantucci, Bruno; Richardson, Daniel – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
A central question for psycholinguistics concerns the role of grammatical constraints in online sentence processing. Many current theories maintain that the language processing mechanism constructs a parse or parses that are grammatically consistent with the whole of the perceived input each time it processes a word. Several bottom-up, dynamical…
Descriptors: Sentence Structure, Psycholinguistics, Grammar, Computer Assisted Instruction
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Sheen, Ron; O'Neill, Robert – Applied Linguistics, 2005
This response article addresses two issues raised by the publication of Basturkmen et al. (2004). The most important one concerns the nature of the research itself, whilst the other relates to the relevance of the purpose of the research to the aims of the involvement of applied linguistics in second and foreign language teaching. As to the first,…
Descriptors: Second Languages, Teaching Methods, Language Teachers, Applied Linguistics
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Berry, Roger – Language Awareness, 2005
This paper investigates L2 English learners' reactions to mixed personality in a pedagogic grammar. Personality refers to how authors represent themselves in a text and interact with their readers (e.g. personally via the use of personal pronouns or impersonally via the use of the passive, etc.); mixed personality occurs when an author switches…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Form Classes (Languages), Grammar, English (Second Language)
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Leonard, Laurence B.; Hansson, Kristina; Nettelbladt, Ulrike; Deevy, Patricia – Language Acquisition, 2004
We report a cross-linguistic investigation of English-and Swedish-speaking children with specific language impairment (SLI) in an attempt to determine whether Wexler's (1998; 2003) (Extended) Unique Checking Constraint (EUCC) can account for the grammatical profiles of these groups of children. In Study 1, a group of Swedish-speaking preschoolers…
Descriptors: Severity (of Disability), Language Impairments, English, Swedish
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Armon-Lotem, Sharon; Crain, Stephen; Varlokosta, Spyridoula – Language Acquisition, 2004
This article is concerned with the correspondence conditions that hold between certain semantic relations--including part-whole relations, possession, location, and the semantic features [+- animate] or [+- count]--and certain syntactic structures including genitives and relative clauses. The objective is to determine the extent to which these…
Descriptors: Semantics, Syntax, Language Acquisition, Grammar
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