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Wachal, Robert S.; Spreen, Otfried – 1970
A system of 20 Fortran and PL/1 programs, developed for an analysis of aphasic and normal speech transcripts, is described in detail. The programs aid in lexical, grammatical, paralinguistic and statistical analyses, as well as in data preparation and correction. They can also be used in schizophrenic and other kinds of pathological language and…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Computational Linguistics, Grammar, Language Styles
Wolfram, Walt – 1973
One of the most significant problems that linguists face in their attempts to describe Vernacular Black English (VBE) is the matter of fluctuating forms. It is consistently observed that speakers appear to fluctuate between a socially stigmatized variant and its presumed nonstigmatized counterpart. Fluctuations in VBE have often been viewed as a…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Descriptive Linguistics, Dialect Studies, English
Plax, Pamela M. – 1973
Oral interpretation utilizes the self-referencing qualities of language and literature which involves the interpreter as both actor and reader. By "self-referencing" is meant the capacity language has to express not only literal meaning but also, at the same time, the process of realization and of attitudinizing toward this meaning.…
Descriptors: Dramatics, Interpretive Reading, Interpretive Skills, Language
Shuy, Roger W. – 1974
The assumptions of sociolinguistics are contrasted with those of its more static predecessors in light of their potential for bearing on educational problems. The focus on variability with regard to sex, age, style, socioeconomic status, race, education is more akin to the dynamics of the linguistic and educational setting in which a child finds…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences, Educational Innovation, Educational Practices
Shuy, Roger W. – 1974
Sociolinguistics is characterized by a concern for viewing language variation and for seeing language in real social contexts. It has a high potential for relationship and application to other fields such as education, sociology, and psychology. Sociolinguistics try to study the speech of a community, and instead of studying the presence or…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences, Dialect Studies, Language Instruction
Chiu, Rosaline K. – 1974
Course designers and teachers of English as a second or foreign language need a pedagogical grammar, that is, a collection of linguistic statements about English which specifies the linguistic behaviors that an ESL/EFL learner will need to acquire and which can easily be used in the preparation of materials and lessons. Pedagogical grammars…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, English (Second Language), Government Employees, Language Research
Silva, Clare M.; Zwicky, Arnold M. – 1973
The distinction between formal and casual English as reflected in the lexicon, in phonology, and in syntax is studied. Formality is treated as separate from other categorizations of language such as geographical origin of the speaker, social class of the participants, or specific context of discourse. The study was restricted mainly to the use of…
Descriptors: Classification, Descriptive Linguistics, English, Language Styles
Brook, G. L. – 1973
The English language is not a monolithic entity but an amalgam of many different varieties that can be associated respectively with groups of speakers, with individuals, and with the occasion. Among such varieties are slang, regional and class dialects, the language of children, and the language used by public speakers, journalists, lawyers,…
Descriptors: Child Language, Descriptive Linguistics, Diachronic Linguistics, Language Styles
Littell, Joseph Fletcher, Ed. – 1972
A collection of articles from "The Language of Man" series is presented which describe the ways in which we think and act. The articles deal with semantics, the language of advertising, language and race, and language and politics; they are augmented by humorous features, examples from real life, and graphics. The style is informal. The book is…
Descriptors: English Education, Expressive Language, Language, Language Arts
Cluett, Robert – 1976
This book is based on the York Computer Inventory of Prose Style, which seeks to provide a quantitative description of the syntactic characteristics of the literary language of specific authors over the last 400 years. After a brief theoretical introduction and a description of texts and sampling procedures, the discussion turns to specific…
Descriptors: Databases, Language Patterns, Language Styles, Literary Criticism
Funkhouser, James L. – 1976
The ways speakers of Black English modify features of their spoken dialect in the process of adapting their language to writing are examined in this dissertation, on the basis of a corpus of writing from 41 black students enrolled in a St. Louis community college composition course. Each student is represented by 500 to 1000 words of writing…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Black Students, Community Colleges, Doctoral Dissertations
Peer reviewedLapidus, Lawrence A. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1976
Descriptors: Grammar, Higher Education, Language Styles, Language Usage
Peer reviewedGiles, Howard; And Others – Linguistics, 1975
This study was designed to determine whether subjects would behave differently to a standard and nonstandard British-accented speaker. The matched-guise procedure was used with a stimulus speaker present, face-to-face with listeners. Listeners did not know they would subsequently be required to evaluate the speaker's personality. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, English, Language Attitudes, Language Styles
Peer reviewedHarker, W. John – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1978
Due to the deviance in language and the ideational fusion characteristic of poetry, the reader is engaged in a specialized form of information processing differing markedly from the reading of prose. Understanding occurs when the reader restructures his concept of reality to conform to that of the poem. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Processing, Language Styles
Tebeaux, Elizabeth – ABCA Bulletin, 1978
Although role-playing is an effective way to create the atmosphere of "real" business situations, technical writing teachers should continue to concentrate primarily on student writing problems and the development of such composition skills as brevity and audience awareness. (RL)
Descriptors: Business Communication, Course Objectives, Efficiency, Higher Education


