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Dabbs, James M., Jr. – 1982
Fourier analysis, a common technique in engineering, breaks down a complex wave form into its simple sine wave components. Communication researchers have recently suggested that this technique may provide an index of the rhythm of conversation, since vocalizing and pausing produce a complex wave form pattern of alternation between two speakers. To…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Content Analysis, Discourse Analysis, Interpersonal Communication
Crismore, Avon – 1982
Milton's style of pronominal reference in his essay, "Areopagitica," leads to a lack of comprehension at times and to slow processing. His use of demonstrative pronouns makes it difficult to identify antecedents precisely and quickly. For example, in one case a reader must go back over 400 words to find an antecedent. His use of relative…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Discourse Analysis, Language Processing, Pronouns
Chaudron, Craig; Richards, Jack C. – 1985
The study examined the ways in which different categories of discourse marker affect how well foreign college students understand university lectures, and specifically, the effects of macro markers (those indicating overall organization) and micro markers (functioning as fillers, indicating links between sentences). Four versions of an American…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, College Instruction, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Students
Silva, Marilyn N. – 1984
The notion that children over age 5 have acquired a conjunction once they have used it appropriately once or a specified number of times is challenged with data from a study of the narrative discourse of school age children. In the study, 26 adults and 71 children aged 4 to 11 were asked to tell a story about three sets of story pictures. Analysis…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Conjunctions
Hudson, Judith; Nelson, Katherine – 1984
A study of the development of children's production of two kinds of narratives, script and episodic, had as subjects 60 children aged 3, 5, and 7, with 20 children in each age group. In the experiment, 10 children in each group were asked to produce script narratives ("What happens when you do X?") for 3 events and the other 10 were asked to…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Language Acquisition
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Klatt, Dennis H. – Journal of Phonetics, 1975
This paper reports on experiments conducted to demonstrate that segmental duration in English is syntactically determined in a connected discourse. The methodology for investigation is outlined. Various factors influencing duration, such as semantics, syntax, rhythm, intonation and lexical stress are discussed. (Author/CLK)
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Generative Phonology
Oshika, Beatrice T.; And Others – IEEE Transactions on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, 1975
This paper presents phonological rules describing systematic pronunciation variation in natural continuous speech. It is argued that a speech unders tanding system must explain such variation by incorporating phonological rules. Spectrographic findings are included. (C K)
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Phonemes, Phonology
Hinds, John – 1982
Research is reviewed on systematic differences in expository styles due to cultural or linguistic diversity. The critique concentrates on the method of data gathering, the usage of the categorization "Oriental," and the description of English paragraph development. An investigation is reported that consisted of an analysis of the Japanese and…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Comparative Analysis, Discourse Analysis, English
Raskin, Victor – 1981
Extralexical information, that is, those semantic properties evoked by words which are not usually accommodated in lexicons of any kind, is essential for the comprehension of numerous ordinary sentences in a natural language. A brief review of studies on forms of extralexical information shows that those works do not deal with: (1) questions of…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Dictionaries, Discourse Analysis, Lexicology
Litteral, Robert – 1980
Features of connected discourse that have been identified by discourse analysis may be applied to the evaluation of oral proficiency in a second language. For example, in the area of semantics, a speaker's control of the cause-result relationship involves, among other things, the ability to produce the different grammatical and lexical…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Language Proficiency, Linguistic Performance
Mathis, Jerry W. – 1981
The successful oral reading of poetry requires that oral interpreters conduct phenomenological investigations of the first lines of the poems, not merely to make these lines happen properly but to suggest what has preceded the first line. Individual word meanings in the opening lines of a poem establish "structures of intentionality"--the…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Literary Devices
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Tannen, Deborah; Oztek, Piyale Comert – 1977
Speakers of Turkish and Greek make far more extensive use of formulaic expressions than do speakers of English. Many of these formulas are situation-oriented, and accompany anxiety-provoking events, happy events, and the act of establishing rapport. Illness, death, leave-taking, and good fortune are among events typically accompanied by formulas.…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Discourse Analysis, Greek, Social Structure
Tuso, Joseph F. – 1979
General Systems Theoy is a contemporary discipline that profitably lends itself as a new approach to literature. Pioneered by Ludwig von Bertalanffy in Germany in the 1930s, the theory has had successful applications in the United States in philosophy, business, and urban planning. Applications of certain principles of systems theory to A.…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Discourse Analysis, English Instruction, Literary Criticism
Meyer, Bonnie J. F. – 1980
Research has identified three reading strategies that are affected in various ways by signaling--the emphasis of superordinate relationships in text. Using a structure strategy, readers follow the text's superordinate relations to focus on the text's message and how it relates to supportive details. Readers who use the detail/list strategy focus…
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Context Clues, Discourse Analysis, Organization
Penelope, Julia – 1980
Although the nature of topicalization is complex and cannot be easily separated from considerations of syntactic structure and sentence focus, analysis of language usage has indicated that topicalization is more a stylistic than a syntactic process. Topicalization refers to moving a noun phrase (NP) into the initial position of a sentence.…
Descriptors: Audiences, Discourse Analysis, Language Styles, Literary Devices
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