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Dekydtspotter, Laurent; Sprouse, Rex A.; Anderson, Bruce – Second Language Research, 1998
Argues that the null preposition phenomenon is a special case of reliance on the A-bar binding strategy, examining research on English-French interlanguage in college classrooms and suggesting that apparent categorical mismatches in A-bar chains may result from preposition incorporation. Second-language learners can appeal to the A-bar binding…
Descriptors: College Students, French, Grammar, Higher Education
Clachar, Arlene – Language Learning, 2005
The study sought to examine the effect of lexical aspect and narrative discourse structure on the pattern of acquisition and use of English verbal morphology exhibited by creole-speaking students. Findings indicated that the emergent pattern of morphology in the creole participants' written interlanguage appeared to be influenced not only by…
Descriptors: Standard Spoken Usage, Morphology (Languages), Interlanguage, English
Alcon Soler, Eva – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2005
This paper is based on a study which attempted to examine the efficacy of instruction at the pragmatic level. Specifically, the main purpose of the study was to investigate to what extent two instructional paradigms--explicit versus implicit instruction--affected learners' knowledge and ability to use request strategies. One hundred and thirty-two…
Descriptors: Pragmatics, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
Richards, Jack C. – RELC Journal: A Journal of Language Teaching and Research, 2005
Two views of listening are examined. The first, listening as comprehension, emphasizes accessing meaning through listening, and focusses on the message rather than on form. The second, listening as acquisition, emphasizes the role of listening in promoting language acquisition, and emphasizes the role of noticing in facilitating language…
Descriptors: Interlanguage, Second Language Instruction, Second Language Learning, Listening Skills
White, Joanna; Munoz, Carmen; Collins, Laura – Language Awareness, 2007
This paper reports on two studies that investigated the effectiveness of a contrastive analysis type of pedagogical intervention, which aimed to promote interlanguage development in the use and understanding of English possessive determiners (PDs) among adolescent second language (L2) learners. The first research question asked whether explicit…
Descriptors: Intervention, Form Classes (Languages), Interlanguage, English (Second Language)
Conradie, Simone – Second Language Research, 2006
Researchers who assume that Universal Grammar (UG) plays a role in second language (L2) acquisition are still debating whether L2 learners have access to UG in its entirety (the Full Access hypothesis; e.g. Schwartz and Sprouse, 1994; 1996; White, 1989; 2003) or only to those aspects of UG that are instantiated in their first language (L1) grammar…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Language Universals, Indo European Languages, Native Speakers
Chen, Junyu – International Education Journal, 2007
This article discusses the reasons why Chinese learners of English avoid using phrasal verbs in an English community context or when using English as an inter-language in China. The avoidance of phrasal verbs often leads to ineffective communication. By adopting appropriate pedagogical and methodological approaches or providing proper guidance to…
Descriptors: Verbs, Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Interlanguage
Tang, Gladys – CUHK Papers in Linguistics, 1993
This paper examines a specific aspect of systematic variability, which is taken to be a result of influence of linguistic context on interlanguage (IL) performance. While it is important to describe how or under what circumstances a linguistic context exerts an influence on IL development, one also needs to explain why it occurs. On the basis of a…
Descriptors: Chinese, Context Effect, Contrastive Linguistics, English (Second Language)
Beebe, Leslie M. – 1985
An examination of the social psychological basis of style shifting suggests that, contrary to Labovian theory, many style shifts are not a function of shifts in attention to speech and that there are other more explanatory ways of analyzing style shifts. Some reasons for this view are: (1) attention to speech is sometimes negatively correlated…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Interlanguage, Language Research, Language Styles
Schachter, Jacquelyn – 1979
A research project is discussed involving the collection of production data from writing samples of 375 adult learners of English divided equally among five language backgrounds: Arabic, Chinese, Japanese, Persian, and Spanish. Information is presented about three constructions: (1) subject relative clause, (2) infinitival complement on verb, and…
Descriptors: Adults, Classification, English (Second Language), Error Analysis (Language)
Yorio, Carlos A. – 1980
This discussion of student output concentrates on reasons for learner's errors, types of errors, and some techniques for correcting them. An error is defined as an unintentional deviation from an expected pattern, which could be a linguistic form, a phonological or a grammatical rule, or an incorrect form or expression in a particular situation.…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Interlanguage, Language Usage, Postsecondary Education
Py, Bernard – Francais dans le Monde, 1984
It is suggested that it is not between two languages that transfers and interference occur, but within the learner. The learner mediates and constructs this relationship according to acquisition operations, processes, strategies, and stages that contrastive analysis, despite its utility, can neither account for nor predict. (MSE)
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, French, Interference (Language), Interlanguage

Lamendella, John T.; Selinker, Larry – Language Learning, 1979
Six tentative conclusions about the role of extrinsic feedback in interlanguage fossilization are presented and discussed in light of hypotheses made by Virgil and Oller regarding this phenomenon. Extrinsic factors are those characteristics of the learner which are oriented toward the environment and which act as the interface between the learner…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Feedback, Interlanguage, Language Patterns

Vigil, Neddy A.; Oller, John W. – Language Learning, 1976
A cybernetic model of factors involved in the fossilization of grammatical and lexical forms in learner grammars is offered. A distinction is made between affective and cognitive dimensions of a multidimensional channel of human communication; and the effect of expected and unexpected feedback on these two dimensions is discussed. (Author/POP)
Descriptors: Conditioning, Cybernetics, Interlanguage, Language Research

Granger, Sylviane – CALICO Journal, 2003
Describes the three-tiered error annotation system designed to annotate the "French Interlanguage Database" (FRIDA) corpus. The research took place within a project that aims to produce a learner corpus-informed computer assisted language learning (CALL) program for French as a foreign language. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Databases, Error Correction, French