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Lillo-Martin, Diane; And Others – Papers and Reports on Child Language Development, 1985
In an examination of the acquisition of the spatial syntax of American Sign Language (ASL), 43 children aged 3-10 years were given a range of comprehension and elicitation tests designed to analyze the subsystems involved in the corrrect use of ASL syntax. The subsystems were nominal establishment, verb agreement, and consistency of reference. The…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Child Language, Children, Comprehension
Lee, Barbara B. – 1986
The paper reports on a study of the rate of language learning of 12 children aged 2 to 10 with severe to profound bilateral hearing losses. Intended to help deaf children learn spoken language at the same rate as average hearing Ss, the intervention stressed three qualities of linguistic information: (1) clarity, (2) appropriateness, and (3)…
Descriptors: Cued Speech, Deafness, Developmental Stages, Elementary Education
Cameron, Penelope – 1988
Guided readers are written so students of English as a second language (ESL) can read them without supervision, and graded for different levels of reading competence. A superlative guided reader allows the student to read with such comfort and assurance that he will forget English is not his native language, be willing to guess, and become…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Guidelines, Limited English Speaking, Publishing Industry
Paulsell, Patricia R. – 1987
A discussion of problems in teaching business German focuses on methodologies used to introduce syntax and grammar at the introductory and intermediate levels. The formalistic, progressive approaches to grammar and syntax that American students are accustomed to in language instruction put them at a disadvantage because they: (1) make it difficult…
Descriptors: Business Communication, German, Grammar, Higher Education
Naigles, Letitia; And Others – 1987
Two studies investigated whether young children acquiring verbs at an exceptional rate can use the syntactic structure of familiar and unfamiliar verbs to make conjectures about some aspect of the meanings of those verbs. The preferential looking paradigm (Golinkoff and Hirsh-Pasek, 1981) was used to set up a naturalistic pairing of scene and…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Auditory Stimuli, Child Language, Hypothesis Testing
Irvine, Judith T. – 1975
African Wolof society is divided into a number of ranked status groups or castes, the largest of which is the high-ranking noble caste. Wolof conceive of two styles of speaking, the restrained or noble-like and the elaborated or "griot"-like, and the two styles are connected by the presence or absence of "kerse," honor and self-control. The…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Diachronic Linguistics, Intonation, Language Styles
Rondal, Jean A.; And Others – 1986
Two experiments examined the process of acquisition of sentence structure in the passive voice among young children. The subjects were several hundred monolingual French-speaking children aged 4-11 in schools in Liege, Belgium. The two experiments used different subject groups. In the first experiment, the children were required to interpret…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Foreign Countries, French
Tyler, Andrea; Nagy, William E. – 1985
Knowledge of derivational morphology can aid readers in the analysis and acquisition of new vocabulary, in lexical access, and in establishing the syntactic structure of sentences. A study investigated good and poor readers' knowledge and use of derivational suffixes in establishing sentence level syntax. Subjects, 123 10th and 11th grade…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Knowledge Level, Morphology (Languages), Reading Ability
Morariu, Janis; Bruning, Roger – 1984
The problem of English language-processing by 30 prelingually deaf high school students is examined from a contextualist perspective. The influence of language mode (print or sign) and syntax--English or American Sign Language (ASL) on recall, preference, and comprehension was approached through the processing of meaningful and coherent passages…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Congenital Impairments, Deafness, Encoding (Psychology)
Moe, Alden J.; Hopkins, Carol J. – 1978
Compilation of a list of the most common phrases used in reading was begun with the rationale that the quick recognition of phrases would facilitate reading comprehension. These first efforts showed that categorizing phrases by parts of speech did not provide acceptable levels of accuracy. The system that was effective, however, used a computer…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Computers, Content Analysis, Elementary Education
Rigney, Joseph W.; Munro, Allen – 1977
Recent developments in cognitive psychology and artificial intelligence have shown that various types of prior knowledge play important roles in understanding during text processing and have resulted in a new kind of model for conceptual processing, "procedural semantics." This paper discusses two types of units, or schemata, which,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Association (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Educational Theories
Tucker, Elizabeth Sulzby – 1976
This paper begins with a review of recent studies of the development of phonology, syntax, and semantics between the ages of five and twelve. Studies in pragmatics (or the functions of language) are also considered. The paper then turns from investigations of oral language acquisition to an examination of the interplay between oral and written…
Descriptors: Child Language, Elementary Education, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hollerbach, Wolf – Modern Language Journal, 1975
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Course Content, Form Classes (Languages), French
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bastuji, J. – Langue Francaise, 1975
Discusses the role of linguistics in the study of phrase structure or expressive communication. Various linguistic approaches, including transformational grammar, structural linguistics, and the sociolinguistic approach, are discussed in connection with communication instruction. (Text is in French.) (AM)
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Expressive Language, Linguistic Theory, Semantics
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Woodbury, Hanni – International Journal of American Linguistics, 1975
In Onondaga and all northern Iroquoian languages, nouns can be incorporated into verbs. The function of this is semantic as well as syntactic. It is semantic in that the sense of an incorporated noun will be narrower than its unincorporated counterpart regardless of modifiers. Incorporation changes the transformational structure of the sentence.…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Morphology (Languages), Nouns, Phrase Structure
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