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Peer reviewedInkelas, Sharon – Journal of Child Language, 2003
A longitudinal study of one children documents an invented language game consisting of suffixal reduplication and onset replacement. Argues that this game may more closely resemble adult rhyme. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Language, Games, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedFranck, Julie; Bowers, Jeffrey S.; Frauenfelder, Uli H.; Vigliocco, Gabriella – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2003
Reports two experiments that assessed the role of orthography in constraining subject verb agreement in written and spoken French. Contrasted a condition in which the singular and plural forms of the subject head nouns were homophones but non-homographs with a condition in which the subject head ones were homophones and homographs in their…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Encoding (Psychology), French, Grammar
Peer reviewedHaryu, Etsuko; Imai, Mutsumi – Child Development, 2002
Three studies investigated how 3-year-old Japanese children interpret the meaning of a new word associated with a familiar artifact. Findings suggest that children flexibly recruit clues from multiple sources, including shape information and function familiarity, but the clues are weighed in hierarchical order so children can determine the single…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Foreign Countries, Japanese, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedKamii, Constance; Manning, Maryann – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 2002
Examined English-speaking preschoolers' level of writing and their performance on oral-segmentation tasks. Found a close relationship between children's levels of writing and their levels of oral segmentation on a writing task in which they were asked to write four pairs of words, for example, "ham" and "hamster." Concluded…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Kindergarten Children, Oral Language, Phonemic Awareness
Peer reviewedFulcher, Glenn; Reiter, Rosina Marquez – Language Testing, 2003
Reviews assumptions underlying approaches to research into speaking task difficulty and questions the view that test scores always vary with task conditions or discourse variation. Offers a new approach to defining task difficulty in terms of the interaction between pragmatic task features and first language cultural background. Results of a study…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Difficulty Level, Language Tests, Oral Language
Peer reviewedHonan, Eileen – Reading Online, 2003
Outlines the author's experience at the Papua New Guinea Education Institute delivering in-service professional development programs to teachers who were implementing the country's new curriculum. Explains the notion of the "bridging years," when children in Papua New Guinea develop skills and knowledge in two cultures and two languages.…
Descriptors: Cultural Education, Curriculum Development, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedLee, Kathy Yuet Sheung; Chiu, Sung Nok; van Hasselt, Charles Andrew – Language and Speech, 2002
Investigated a new research design for the collection of reliable tone perception data from found children, compared lexical and nonlexical items for testing tone perception ability, and identified the relative ease of perceiving the three basic tone contrasts in Cantonese--high level/high rising, high level/low falling, and high rising/low…
Descriptors: Cantonese, Children, Comparative Analysis, Oral Language
Peer reviewedCooper, Nicole; Cutler, Anne; Wales, Roger – Language and Speech, 2002
Four cross-modal priming experiments and two forced-choice identification experiments investigated the use of suprasegmental cues to stress in the recognition of spoken English words by native English speaking and nonnative (Dutch) listeners. Results are discussed. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Dutch, English (Second Language), Native Speakers, Oral Language
Peer reviewedHinton, Leanne – Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 2003
Surveys developments in language revitalization and language death. Focusing on indigenous languages, discusses the role and nature of appropriate linguistic documentation, possibilities for bilingual education, and methods of promoting oral fluency and intergenerational transmission in affected languages. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Indigenous Populations, Language Fluency, Language Maintenance
Peer reviewedGoldstein, Tara – Canadian Modern Language Review, 2002
Discusses the possibilities of working with high school students as researchers of culture and language in their own school communities. Features a short ethnographic play entitled, "No Pain, No Gain," which dramatizes the difficulty of preparing an oral presentation in a second language. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Drama, Ethnography, High School Students, High Schools
Peer reviewedThordardottir, Elin T.; Chapman, Robin S.; Wagner, Laura – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2002
Investigated the use of complex syntax in narrative language samples of older children and adolescents with Down syndrome and a group of typically developing children matched on mean length of utterance. Findings indicate that syntactic development in individuals with Down Syndrome continues into late adolescence and is not limited to simple…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Discourse Analysis, Down Syndrome
Klecan-Aker, Joan S.; Kelty, Kimberly R. – Journal of Childhood Communication Disorders, 1990
Ten fourth grade language-learning-disabled children and 10 normal peers were shown a movie and subsequently asked to tell the story. Language-disabled subjects told less complex stories. It is concluded that normal subjects used a greater number of story grammar components within each narrative and remembered more aspects of the previously…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Intermediate Grades, Language Handicaps, Memory
Peer reviewedSankoff, David; Rousseau, Pascale – Language Variation and Change, 1989
Combinational characterization and statistical and computational techniques for generalizing rule analysis to the inference of rule order are applied to the problems of the reduction of the syllable-final consonants s, n, and r in Caribbean Spanish. Results show that aspiration and deletion can be seen as intrinsically ordered in both s and r…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Consonants, Foreign Countries, Language Patterns
Peer reviewedDenning, Keith – Language Variation and Change, 1989
Quantitative evidence is presented for a change in vernacular Black English (VBE) that appears to involve increasing similarities between VBE and other varieties. It is suggested that, although Black varieties and White varieties of English remain distinct and undergo certain changes separately, this need not be regarded as absolute divergence.…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Black Dialects, Diachronic Linguistics, English
Peer reviewedFujiki, Martin; And Others – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1990
A study examined the manner in which 10 specifically language-impaired children and their linguistically normal chronological age-matched peers repaired overlapping speech. Conversational samples from each student were elicited by an adult examiner. (26 references) (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Child Language, Error Analysis (Language), Language Handicaps, Language Patterns


