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Kilbourne, Brock K.; Ginsburg, Gerald P. – 1982
This study reports a replication of an earlier study by Kilbourne and Ginsberg (1980) which indicated the occurrence of a transition from predominantly coacting to predominantly alternating infant-mother vocalization patterns. In addition, the present study examined the modulating influences of nursing activity and mother's focus of attention upon…
Descriptors: Attention, Child Development, Comparative Analysis, Infants
Ney, James W. – 1982
A number of studies on the order of adjectives in the English noun phrase are reviewed. Analysis of the studies and examples used in them indicates that almost any order of adjective seems to be possible depending on the intended meaning of the speaker or the situation in which the speaker frames an utterance. To see if in fact the ordering of…
Descriptors: Adjectives, English (Second Language), Higher Education, Language Research
Baetens Beardsmore, Hugo – 1982
This introduction to bilingualism is designed with the undergraduates especially in mind. Since its primary concern is with the bilingual individual, it does assume some knowledge of the basic principles of linguistics. Less detail is accorded to societal bilingualism since the premise is that sociological aspects of bilingualism should be…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Bilingualism, Code Switching (Language), Diglossia
Wade, Barbara – 1981
This paper presents three strategies for convincing English teachers that eliminating sexist language is a serious priority in their profession. The first section of the paper examines the historical evolution of definitions of gender specific words and of pronoun usage, noting both the recency of sexually biased language styles and the myth of a…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Change Strategies, Diachronic Linguistics, English Instruction
Bear, Jean M. – 1979
This study investigates topic units and suggests some practical applications to the teaching of composition to native speakers and second language learners. A topic unit is a structural unit beyond the sentence. It is composed of clauses and consists of two parts -- a head proposition and a set of comments. The head proposition consists of the…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Language Research, Language Styles, Paragraph Composition
Frantz, Donald G. – 1979
Relational Grammar, which has evolved from transformational grammar, relies on a "universal grammar" approach. By closely studying this approach, linguists will be able to understand Relational Grammar (RG) well enough to be able to participate in its further development. The basic assumptions of RG are that…
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Research, Language Typology
Gruszka, Pamela J. – 1980
This study tests the hypothesis that, among bilingual Mexican Americans, the present progressive tense in Spanish is used in the same situations as the progressive would be used in English, even if such usage would not be prescribed by standard Spanish grammar rules. A review is made of Spanish language instructional textbooks concerning the usage…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Interference (Language), Language Patterns, Language Research
Genishi, Celia – 1981
Teacher interventions in the spontaneous arguments of seven preschoolers 3 to 5 years of age were analyzed. Twenty hours of data were audiotaped over a 3-month period in a small, church-affiliated private school while children were involved in free play and classroom activities. Interactions that might be taken as arguments were first transcribed…
Descriptors: Child Language, Conflict, Language Research, Oral Language
Hirshberg, Jan – 1981
Metalinguistic skill is the ability to assume an objective attitude toward language. Metalinguistic awareness is less easily acquired and appears later developmentally than speaking and listening skills. What one needs to know to perceive and use language is not necessarily the same thing that one needs to know to reflect on and comment on…
Descriptors: Child Language, Grade 4, Intermediate Grades, Language Acquisition
Phinney, Marianne – 1980
Recent research in linguistic theory and language acquisition theory has progressed to the point where more detailed hypotheses can be made about the interaction of language learning and linguistic theory. These hypotheses can be used to make more precise predictions about prerequisite knowledge for learning a particular construction and the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Language, Grammar, Language Acquisition
Local, John – York Papers in Linguistics, 1980
The frequencies and co-occurrence distributions of some of the prosodic features in the speech of children are discussed. The emphasis is on the determination of systems and structure of non-segmental lectal variability in the children's speech without primary reference to function. The primary data consisted of selected episodes of connected…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Intonation, Language Acquisition
Ney, James W. – 1975
In order to understand more fully how young people process written language, miscues made by fourth grade students in both the reading process and the writing process were studied. Miscues which occurred in signaled sentence combining exercises were compared with miscues in reading determined by procedures developed by Goodman and associates. The…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Grade 4, Intermediate Grades, Language Research
Scott, Kathryn P. – 1979
Two studies were undertaken to determine first whether language characteristics attributed to females are more socially desirable than those attributed to males and second whether a double standard exists such that language traits seen as socially desirable for adults in general are viewed as negative when assigned to either females or males. For…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Communicative Competence (Languages), Females, Language Attitudes
Mosenthal, Peter – 1977
The assumption that "ideal" text grammars are valid descriptions of the schemata used by children to organize their recall of text was challenged in a study involving 150 elementary school children. The children, all with above-average reading ability, were classified as having one of three types of schemata: theme-initial (identifying…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis
Scott, Ann Martin – 1978
Students learn, understand, and retain knowledge best when they discover it themselves. In the area of semantics, the study of how meaning is conveyed through language, explicit knowledge may appear to be obvious once it becomes conscious, but unless people are explicitly aware of their implicit knowledge and assumptions, they may be at their…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discourse Analysis, English Instruction, Higher Education
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