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Hernández-Campoy, Juan Manuel – AILA Review, 2014
The development of Sociolinguistics has been qualitatively and quantitatively outstanding within Linguistic Science since its beginning in the 1950s, with a steady growth in both theoretical and methodological developments as well as in its interdisciplinary directions within the spectrum of language and society. Field methods in sociolinguistic…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Sociolinguistics, Qualitative Research, Statistical Analysis
Pauls, Laura J.; Archibald, Lisa M. D. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2016
Purpose: Mounting evidence demonstrates deficits in children with specific language impairment (SLI) beyond the linguistic domain. Using meta-analysis, this study examined differences in children with and without SLI on tasks measuring inhibition and cognitive flexibility. Method: Databases were searched for articles comparing children (4-14…
Descriptors: Children, Executive Function, Language Impairments, Meta Analysis
Yang, Bei; Chen, Bin – Higher Education Studies, 2016
Semantic prosody is a concept that has been subject to considerable criticism and debate. One big concern is to what extent semantic prosody is domain or register-related. Previous studies reach the agreement that CAUSE has an overwhelmingly negative meaning in general English. Its semantic prosody remains controversial in academic writing,…
Descriptors: Semantics, Suprasegmentals, Academic Discourse, Computational Linguistics
Jordan, Jay – Composition Studies, 2016
This semester, for the second time in the last couple of years, the author is leading a graduate seminar on histories of rhetoric. Little scholarship traces the development of multilingual composition in antiquity (with Brian Ray's article as a clear and excellent exception), so the author typically feels like students hit a rich but untapped…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Historical Interpretation, Global Approach, Cultural Influences
Choi, Seongsook – Applied Linguistics, 2016
Computational techniques and software applications for the quantitative content analysis of texts are now well established, and many qualitative data software applications enable the manipulation of input variables and the visualization of complex relations between them via interactive and informative graphical interfaces. Although advances in…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Open Source Technology, Statistical Analysis, Content Analysis
Veneziano, Edy; Clark, Eve V. – Journal of Child Language, 2016
Children acquiring French elaborate their early verb constructions by adding adjacent morphemes incrementally at the left edge of core verbs. This hypothesis was tested with 2657 verb uses from four children between 1;3 and 2;7. Consistent with the Adjacency Hypothesis, children added clitic subjects frst only to present tense forms (as in…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, French, Verbs
Zheltukhina, Marina R.; Vikulova, Larisa G.; Slyshkin, Gennady G.; Vasileva, Ekaterina G. – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2016
The article examines the onomastic aspect of a medieval worldview through the analysis of naming principles for the kings of the Merovingian, the Carolingian and the Wessex dynasties. The etymological, structural and semantic analysis of the first Frankish and Anglo-Saxon kings' names and bynames is used. The etymology of the first Frankish and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Naming, Power Structure, Medieval History
Bello, Iria – International Journal of English Studies, 2016
Nominalizations are well-known features of scientific writing. Scholars have been intrigued by their form and by their functions. While these features have been widely studied, the cognitive side of nominalizations in scientific texts still needs further attention. Nominalizations contribute to the advancement of discourse and at the same time add…
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, English, Language Variation, Scientific Research
Dewilde, Joke; Creese, Angela – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2016
We consider discursive shadowing as methodology in linguistic ethnography and how it refines our analyses of participants' situated practices. In addition to the constant and extended company the researcher and key participant keep with one another in the field, shadowing in a linguistic ethnographic approach includes the ubiquitous…
Descriptors: Linguistics, Ethnography, Discourse Analysis, Interpersonal Relationship
Shi, Jiasheng – Journal on English Language Teaching, 2016
Theoretical triads are commonly employed thought patterns and have played an important part in the history of translation. This paper presents a brief introduction to some of the most prominent triads in Chinese thinking over translation and clarifies the misinterpretations of them, with some of their Western counterparts given for comparative…
Descriptors: Chinese, Translation, Semantics, Phonology
Kung, Fan-Wei – Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 2016
This study aims to examine whether the development of media literacy could effectively promote learners' second language (L2) oral communicative competence. Although media literacy has been revealed to have several positive effects for language learning, research regarding its use for effective L2 oral communicative competence has been lacking…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Media Literacy, Foreign Countries, Second Language Learning
Coleman, Stephen M. – ProQuest LLC, 2016
That there exists a group of biblical Hebrew verbs which appear in both transitive and intransitive grammatical constructions has long been recognized. However, explanations of this phenomenon among modern BH grammarians, especially regarding the grammatical status of the Object, have been unsatisfactorily vague. Many issues relevant to the BH…
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Semitic Languages, Verbs, Grammar
Jin, Dawei – ProQuest LLC, 2016
This thesis is about strong island effects and intervention effects. Strong island effects are contexts where operator-variable dependencies cannot be established. The paradigmatic cases of strong island violations in Chinese occur in "why"-questions. This thesis explores a basic contrast: "why"-questions fail to be interpreted…
Descriptors: Semantics, Pragmatics, Chinese, Intervention
Tu, Jung-yueh – ProQuest LLC, 2013
This study investigates the adaptation of word prosody in loanword phonology. First, it explicates several influential loanword theories and reviews some representative cases of prosodic adaptation from different languages. Then, it turns to the focus on the prosodic adaptation of Japanese borrowings into Taiwanese Southern Min (TSM or Taiwanese).…
Descriptors: Japanese, Pronunciation, Linguistic Borrowing, Linguistic Theory
Chik, Alice; Melo-Pfeifer, Sílvia – Language Awareness, 2020
The acquisition of a language is a complex process. Applied Linguistics research tends to view this process as classroom-based. It is only more recently that learners, in particular young learners, are being placed in the centre of investigation in research exploring language learning from their subjective perspectives. To understand these…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, English (Second Language)

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