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Liao, Ern-Huei – ProQuest LLC, 2010
The problem. The purpose of this study is to investigate positive and negative cross-linguistic transfer on EFL learners' phraseological competence in collocations and its relationship to learners' linguistic proficiency. Method. A quantitative study was conducted. Two instruments, multiple choice test and grammaticality judgment test, were…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, English (Second Language), Language Acquisition, Language Proficiency
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Dulay, Heidi C.; Burt, Marina K. – TESOL Quarterly, 1974
This study attempts to determine whether the syntactic errors children make while learning a second language are due to native language interference or to developmental cognitive strategies, as has been found in first language acquisition. (Author)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, English (Second Language), Error Patterns
Noor, Hashim H. – Linguistica Communicatio, 1994
Research on the role of the first language (L1) in second language (L2) learning is reviewed, offering historical background but focusing primarily on work within the last two decades. Attention is given mainly to two aspects of the L1-L2 relationship: positive transfer of knowledge from L1 in the process of learning L2, and negative transfer, or…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Interference (Language), Interlanguage, Language Acquisition
Burckett-Evans, Jenifer – 1980
Productive errors in the Spanish of 3 Spanish-speaking children and 115 adults learning Spanish as a second language are analyzed. The errors are organized into three categories--lexical, morphological, and syntactic--and each category is further divided according to the type of cognitive error-processing strategy shown: simplification, reduction…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Error Analysis (Language)
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Zydatiss, Wolfgang – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, 1974
Supports and expands upon S. P. Corder's theory that all the utterances of a language learner are well-formed and appropriate. (PMP)
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns, Interference (Language), Language Acquisition
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Snow, Catherine E. – 1975
Preliminary results from a longitudinal study of English-speaking children and adults learning Dutch in natural situations suggest that 12- to 15-year-olds learned faster than either older or younger subjects during their first 6 months in Holland. All age differences had disappeared in a group of advanced subjects (English-speakers who had been…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Dutch, Error Patterns, Interference (Language)
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Piper, Terry – Canadian Modern Language Review, 1984
Results of a study of sound system acquisition of five-year-old students of English-as-a-second-language show that first- and second-language learners exhibit similar but not identical simplification processes, and that evidence for a common developmental sequence in acquisition of consonant sounds was limited. (MSE)
Descriptors: Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Consonants, English (Second Language)
Tarone, Elaine – 1974
Participants in a seminar series in second language acquisition held at Harvard University discussed three papers by Dulay and Burt ("Goofing: An Indicator of Children's Second Language Learning Strategies,""Should We Teach Children Syntax?", "Natural Sequences in Child Second Language Acquisition"), and developed…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Error Patterns, Interference (Language)
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Bailey, Nathalie; And Others – Language Learning, 1974
A test administered to 73 adults learning English as a second language revealed a highly consistent order of relative difficulty in the use of eight functors across different language backgrounds. This study also confirmed earlier results indicating that children and adults use common strategies and process linguistic data similarly. (Author/KM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language), Error Patterns
Cancino, Herlinda; And Others – 1974
Three hypotheses are examined in relation to English copula and negative utterances produced by three native Spanish speakers. The hypotheses are interference, interlanguage and L1=L2, which states that acquisition of a language by second language learners will parallel acquisiton of the same language by first language learners. The results of the…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, English (Second Language), Error Patterns, Interference (Language)
Dulay, Heidi; Burt, Marina – 1974
Previous work by the authors permitted them to hypothesize the existence of certain universal cognitive strategies that play a significant role in child second language acquisition. Forming the basis of the "creative construction process" in L2 learning, these strategies have heretofore remained unspecified. This paper offers new…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Discovery Processes, Error Patterns
Hebrard, Pierre; Mougeon, Raymond – 1975
The data for the study were gathered in the course of a larger sociolinguistic survey carried out among francophones from Welland and Sudbury, Ontario. Among other things, the acquisition of spoken English by bilingual francophone students from these cities was studied in depth, using error analysis. The present study attempts to show that in a…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language)
Gass, Susan M., Ed.; Selinker, Larry, Ed. – 1983
Essays on language transfer in language learning include: excerpts from "Linguistics across Cultures" (Robert Lado); "Language Transfer" (Larry Selinker); "Goofing: An Indication of Children's Second Language Learning Strategies" (Heidi C. Dulay, Marina K. Burt); "Language Transfer and Universal Grammatical Relations" (Susan Gass); "A Role for the…
Descriptors: Age, Children, Cultural Context, Deep Structure
Dulay, Heidi C.; Burt, Marina K. – 1972
The types of syntactic errors made by children learning a second language provide insight into the way in which children acquire the second language. The contrastive analysis hypothesis states that while the child is learning a second language, he will tend to use his native language structures in his second language speech; where there are…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Contrastive Linguistics, Educational Strategies
Hatch, Evelyn – 1974
Classic studies in second language (L2) learning offer little evidence for the validity of the notion of universals in L2 learning. The present study investigates this notion in data collected from 15 observational studies of 40 L2 learners who acquired the L2 naturally, that is, they were not taught the language in any formal ways. Interpretation…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Bilingual Education, Bilingualism, Child Language
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