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Showing 346 to 360 of 2,121 results Save | Export
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Hukari, Thomas E.; Levine, Robert D. – Journal of Linguistics, 1995
This article presents evidence supporting the syntactic nature of adjunct extraction in English and other languages, including the coextensiveness of adjunct and argument extraction and their parallelism with respect to strong/weak crossover effects. Also discussed is the challenge that binding domain effects pose for accounts of adjunct…
Descriptors: English, Grammar, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
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Laeufer, Christiane – Journal of Linguistics, 1995
This article presents a comprehensive view of German syllable structure based on phonetic and psycholinguistic experimental results supplemented by phonological arguments. It supports a theory of syllable structure based on the arrangement of segments according to the Sonority Sequencing Principle augmented by language-specific constraints.…
Descriptors: German, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Phonology
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Goke-Pariola, Abiodun – Language and Communication, 1993
Examines Pierre Bourdieu's basic theory on language and criticisms of structuralism, transformational grammar, and the speech act theory as they appear in Language and Symbolic Power. Bourdieu's theories are applied to the colonial and postcolonial language situation in Nigeria. (JP)
Descriptors: Colonialism, Foreign Countries, Linguistic Theory, Speech Acts
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Kupferman, Lucien – Journal of French Language Studies, 1998
The proceedings of a 1992 French conference on the structuralist approach of linguist Lucien Tesniere are reviewed, focusing on the recent evolution of this approach in French linguistics. Topics discussed include the origins of Tesniere's theory, his model of dependency, flat phrastic structure, fusion of the lexico-semantic and lexico-syntactic…
Descriptors: Conference Proceedings, French, Language Patterns, Language Research
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Protopapas, A. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2006
The assignment of stress when reading Greek can be based on lexical and orthographic information. One hundred and seventy seventh-grade children read lists of isolated words and pseudowords. A large proportion of stress assignment errors were made in pseudoword reading, especially on the items that do not follow the most frequent penultimate…
Descriptors: Suprasegmentals, Orthographic Symbols, Reading Processes, Greek
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Berg, Thomas – Brain and Language, 2006
The aim of this study is to develop a partial theory of phonological paraphasias which has some cross-syndrome and cross-linguistic validity. It is based on the distinction between content and structural units and emphasizes the role of the latter. The notion of structure holds the key to an understanding of the differences among the following…
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, Phonology, Aphasia, Structural Linguistics
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Krott, Andrea; Nicoladis, Elena – Journal of Child Language, 2005
The family size of the constituents of compound words, or the number of compounds sharing the constituents, has been shown to affect adults' access to compound words in the mental lexicon. The present study was designed to see if family size would affect children's segmentation of compounds. Twenty-five English-speaking children between 3;7 and…
Descriptors: Phonology, Young Children, Language Processing, Vocabulary Development
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Matos, Maria Amelia; Passos, Maria de Lourdes R. da F. – Behavior Analyst, 2006
Formal and functional analyses of verbal behavior have been often considered to be divergent and incompatible. Yet, an examination of the history of part of the analytical approach used in "Verbal Behavior" (Skinner, 1957/1992) for the identification and conceptualization of verbal operant units discloses that it corresponds well with formal…
Descriptors: Verbal Stimuli, Traditional Grammar, Structural Linguistics, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Mirman, Daniel; Magnuson, James S.; Estes, Katharine Graf; Dixon, James A. – Cognition, 2008
Many studies have shown that listeners can segment words from running speech based on conditional probabilities of syllable transitions, suggesting that this statistical learning could be a foundational component of language learning. However, few studies have shown a direct link between statistical segmentation and word learning. We examined this…
Descriptors: Syllables, Infants, Probability, Word Recognition
Martins-Baltar, Michel – Revue de Phonetique Appliquee, 1974
Studies the linguistic conception of the laboratory exercises on intonal expressivity included in the audio-visual method for advanced students: "Express Yourself as a Specialist In..." (Text is in French.) (PMP)
Descriptors: French, Intonation, Language Instruction, Second Language Learning
Iran-Nejad, Asghar – 1980
Noting that current theories of comprehension are based on the assumption that cognitive patterns (schemata) are structural constructs and that credit for the structural assumption is generally given to F. C. Bartlett, this paper suggests that problems concerning the phenomenal nature of the patterning aspect of cognition may be more readily…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Patterns, Reading Comprehension, Reading Research
Paradis, Michel – 1974
This paper is a syntactic analysis of standard French negation. The following expressions are described in detail: (1)ne...pas(point), (2)nullement (aucunement), (3)plus, (4)jamais, (5)pas encore, (6)guere, (7)rien, (8)personne, (9)aucun(e), (10)nul(le), (11)ni...ni..., (12)nulle part, (13)que, (14)pas un(e), (15)nul. The negative expressions are…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, French, Grammar, Negative Forms (Language)
Lepschy, Giulio C. – 1970
This book, a revised and expanded English version of the author's Italian work "La Linguistica strutturale" (1961), is a survey of the main trends in structural linguistics intended not only for the linguist but for specialists in other fields and the general reader as well. The initial chapter, "Introductory Notions," discusses general linguistic…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Linguistic Theory, Machine Translation, Mathematical Linguistics
Davis, Philip W. – 1973
This volume explores objectively the essential characteristic of nine twentieth-century linguistic theories with the theoretical variant for discussion based on one closely representative of work within a given approach or usually associated with the name of the theory. First, the theory of Ferdinand de Saussure is discussed based on his book,…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Diachronic Linguistics, Linguistic Theory, Models
Huff, George A. – 1973
This paper presents a method of encoding geometric line-drawings in a way which allows sets of such drawings to be interpreted as formal languages. A characterization of certain geometric predicates in terms of their properties as languages is obtained, and techniques usually associated with generative grammars and formal automata are then applied…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Geometry, Learning, Linguistics
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