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Baker, Ronald L. – Contemporary Education, 1988
The study of folk speech, which traditionally included only regional dialects, has evolved to include cultural and generational dialects. This article discusses how folk speech study has come to include a range of dialects and a variety of sociolinguistic trends. (JL)
Descriptors: Dialects, Ethnography, Folk Culture, Language Classification

Askov, Eunice N.; Kamm, Karlyn – Journal of Educational Research, 1976
Third-, fourth-, and fifth-graders who received training in recognition of context clues performed significantly better than controls on tests of reading skills. (GW)
Descriptors: Context Clues, Elementary Education, Language Classification, Reading Comprehension
Jensen, James D. – Performance and Instruction, 1982
Classifies authoring languages for computer assisted instructional lessons according to a taxonomy based on the hierarchy commonly used for computer languages--the lowest level being the code used by the machine itself and higher levels successively more removed from the machine language. (Author/JJD)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Programs, Language Classification, Microcomputers
LaRocca, Stephen – Georgetown Journal of Languages and Linguistics, 1990
Describes the work by Silvio Ceccato regarding machine translation systems and procedures, exploring such aspects of his work as functional philosophical approaches to machine translation, notional spheres, correlational analysis, and type classifications. Ceccato envisioned many of the methods that are now being applied in machine translation…
Descriptors: Language Classification, Language Processing, Language Research, Machine Translation

Akman, K. Ibhrahim – Journal of Information Science, 1995
Describes a new data compression technique that utilizes the common morphological structure of languages. Topics include classification of languages and their morphological structure; structured text compression; the algorithm and an example using Turkish; theoretical implications; and implementation. (LRW)
Descriptors: Algorithms, Language Classification, Mathematical Formulas, Morphology (Languages)

Whaley, Lindsay J.; Grenoble, Lenore A.; Li, Fengxiang – Language, 1999
Demonstrates that two Tungusic languages, Evenki and Oroqen, that have long been treated as a single language for classification purposes, are better treated as distinct linguistic varieties. Fundamental questions are raised about the current classification of Tungusic languages and a renewed examination is suggested of the role of dialect…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Dialects, Language Classification, Language Variation
Sayahi, Lotfi – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2007
The present paper assesses the implications of the existence of two varieties of the same language for contact-induced language change in cases of bilingualism. By analysing the contact between French and Tunisian Arabic, on the one hand, and Spanish and Northern Moroccan Arabic, on the other, the purpose is to illustrate how the coexistence of…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Interpersonal Communication, Linguistic Borrowing, Interference (Language)
Quirk, Randolph – 1991
It is argued that viewing learners' errors as evidence for the emergence of new varieties of the English language is dangerously mistaken, particularly where it leads to the abandonment of Standard English as a model for learners. It is shown how this view is mistaken by: (1) citing recent British thinking on the relationship of varieties of…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Language Classification, Language Standardization
TROIKE, RUDOLPH C., COMP. – 1967
THE 12 BIBLIOGRAPHIES WHICH MAKE UP THIS COLLECTION WERE COMPILED BY MR. TROIKE'S STUDENTS IN A GRADUATE-LEVEL COURSE IN AMERICAN INDIAN LANGUAGES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, 1966-67. LANGUAGE FAMILIES INCLUDED ARE--(1) NA-DENE, (2) NAVAHO, (3) ALGONQUIAN, (4) UTO-AZTECAN, (5) SIOUAN, (6) IROQUIAN, (7) MAYAN, (8) MIXTEC, (9) QUECHUMARAN…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Bibliographies, Language Classification, Navajo

Joseph, John Earl – Language Problems and Language Planning, 1980
The schema generally used to describe the linguistic situation in Italy includes two categories: dialetto regionale (regional dialect) and italiano regionale (regional Italian). These stand apart from the widely accepted sociolinguistic model "variety--dialect--language." It is demonstrated that both these categories should be treated…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Diachronic Linguistics, Italian, Language Classification

Zughoul, Muhammad Raji; El-Badarien, Mohammed Nasser – 2003
Sociolinguistic research on varieties of language and language variation, along with the necessity for meeting "equivalence" in terms of the appropriateness of the variety to the context have been well recognized in the formulation of a translation theory. However, the treatment of variation has always been restricted to dialect and has not…
Descriptors: Arabic, Dialects, Diglossia, Language Classification

Crawford, James M. – International Journal of American Linguistics, 1973
Research accomplished in connection with the Southeastern Indian Language Project and supported by a grant to the University of Georgia from the National Science Foundation. (RS)
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Charts, Descriptive Linguistics, Language Classification

Tambovtsev, Yuri A. – Educational and Training Technology International, 1993
Discussion of the use of computers in Slavonic studies in the Ukraine focuses on linguistics. Topics addressed include the Machine Fund of Russian, a Russian language database; the Machine Fund of Non-Russian Languages that includes each republic of the former Soviet Union; natural language processing; and comparing languages. (18 references) (LRW)
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, Databases, Foreign Countries, Language Classification

Lehrer, Adrienne – Journal of Linguistics, 1975
Argues that Charles Morris' division of signs into syntactics, semantics and pragmatics is too rigid. The line between pragmatics and semantics is not sharp, and a language theory is needed that can predict and explain borderline cases without forcing them into arbitrary established categories. (CHK)
Descriptors: Adverbs, Descriptive Linguistics, Language Classification, Linguistic Theory

Langleben, M. M. – Linguistics, 1974
Discusses the stratification and specialization of common language into sublanguages for various spheres of activity and the introduction of the sublanguages into different language boundaries. (CK)
Descriptors: Language, Language Classification, Language Research, Language Role