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Ingham, Richard – Language Acquisition, 1994
Research is reported showing that children are lexically conservative in the domain of learning argument omissibility. Two studies (one observational case study, one experimental) show a relationship between the argument frames used in input and those used by child subjects. (Contains 38 references.) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Language, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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Jagtman, Margriet; Bongaerts, Theo – Second Language Research, 1994
Discusses the design and use of the Computer Model for Language Acquisition (COMOLA), a computer program designed to analyze syntactic development in second-language learners by examining their oral utterances. Also compares COMOLA to the recently developed Computer-Aides Linguistic Analysis (COALA) program. (MDM)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computer Software Development, Computer Uses in Education, Discourse Analysis
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Holman, Robyn A. – Language Quarterly, 1994
Reexamines the work of earlier scholars on the circumstances accompanying the changes in the names of the days of the week. Syntactic changes as well as the Church's struggle to eradicate the names of the pagan divinities played a great role in effecting these changes. Dual designations, full forms, and condensed ones existed side by side in some…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Christianity, Church Responsibility, Church Role
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Halleck, Gene B. – Modern Language Journal, 1995
This study examined the relationship between holistic judgements of oral proficiency and objective measures of syntactic maturity of 107 Chinese students of English as a Foreign Language. It found significant differences in objective measures of syntactic maturity and that demonstrated levels of syntactic maturity varied according to the task. (48…
Descriptors: College Students, English (Second Language), Evaluation Methods, Higher Education
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Penning, Marge J.; Raphael, Taffy E. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1991
Examines differences in language ability between normally achieving students and learning-disabled students with reading comprehension problems. Poor comprehending students differed from normal achievers for all language measures and in the manner that reader- and text-related variables predicted comprehension. Results supported the positive role…
Descriptors: Grade 6, Learning Disabilities, Multivariate Analysis, Reader Text Relationship
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Carr, Thomas H.; Curran, Tim – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 1994
Addressed three issues in a description of techniques used to study how people learn structured sequences. These are the content of what is learned, the role of conscious awareness in syntactic learning, and the role of limited-capacity processing or focal attention in syntactic learning. (Contains 86 references.) (Author)
Descriptors: Attention, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures, Fixed Sequence
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Stubbs, Michael – Applied Linguistics, 1994
Analyzes the use of language in two British and Australian secondary school textbooks and a corpus of written British English of one million words. Significant differences were found in the distribution of syntactic patterns in the two books, and these differences are discussed as evidence of the ideological stances expressed in the books.…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Computational Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries
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Schwantes, Frederick M. – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1991
Investigates the degree to which children and adult readers use semantic and syntactic information sources to increase speed of word recognition and to increase speed of determining sentence meaningfulness. Finds three developmental differences in the speed of analyzing these sentences for words/nonwords versus meaningfulness/nonmeaningfulness.…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Grade 3, Grade 6, Higher Education
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Savage-Rumbaugh, E. Sue; And Others – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1993
A two-year-old child and an eight-year-old bonobo exposed to spoken English and lexigrams from infancy were asked to respond to novel sentences. Both subjects comprehended novel requests and simple syntactic devices. The bonobo decoded the syntactic device of word recursion more accurately than the child; the child performed better than the bonobo…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Evolution, Expressive Language, Infants
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Weiss, Amy L.; Johnson, Cynthia J. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1993
School-aged, hearing-impaired children's propensity for incorporating complex syntax into the narratives and conversations they produced was investigated. Language samples containing both conversations and narratives in the form of story retellings were collected from seven subjects with moderate-to-severe hearing losses. (48 references) (VWL)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education
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Maciejewski, Anthony A.; Leung, Nelson K. – CALICO Journal, 1992
The Nihongo Tutorial System is designed to assist English-speaking scientists and engineers in acquiring reading proficiency in Japanese technical literature. It provides individualized lessons that match interest area/language ability with available materials that are encoded with syntactic, phonetic, and morphological information. (14…
Descriptors: Individualized Instruction, Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Japanese, Morphology (Languages)
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Goldin-Meadow, Susan; Mylander, Carolyn – Language, 1990
This paper reviews research findings on the structural properties of deaf childrens' gestural communication systems and evaluates those properties in the context of data gained from other approaches to the question of the young child's language-making capacity. (over 100 references) (JL)
Descriptors: Deafness, Language Acquisition, Language Research, Linguistic Input
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Rasinski, Timothy V. – Intervention in School and Clinic, 1994
This article focuses on the value of developing the skills involved in grouping text into syntactically appropriate units with students having reading problems. It suggests use of phrase-cued texts (in which phrase boundaries are explicitly marked) to move from word-by-word reading to reading in meaningful phrases. (DB)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Cues, Elementary Education, Oral Reading
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Fayol, Michel; Largy, Pierre; Hupet, Michel – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 1999
Aims at demonstrating the gradual automatization of subject-verb agreement operation in young writers by examining developmental changes in the occurrence of agreement errors. Finds that subjects' performance moved from systematic errors to attraction errors through an intermediate phase. Concludes that attraction errors are a byproduct of the…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, French
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Wexler, Kenneth; Rice, Mabel; Schutze, Carson T. – Language Acquisition, 1998
Presents new evidence for the view that specific language impairment (SLI) involves a syntactic-feature deficit within non-evident grammar. The data involve morphological case and its interaction with verbal inflection. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Case (Grammar), Grammar, Language Acquisition
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