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Rayneri, Letty J.; Gerber, Brian L. – Roeper Review, 2003
Students learn new or difficult information most effectively when the classroom environment is compatible with their learning style preferences. Determining learning style preferences can be accomplished by administering the Learning Style Inventory (LSI). However, to understand compatibility with the classroom, an instrument that quantifies…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Classroom Environment, Academically Gifted, Cognitive Style
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Branigan, Holly P.; Pickering, Martin J.; McLean, Janet F. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
Strong evidence suggests that prior syntactic context affects language production (e.g., J. K. Bock, 1986). The authors report 4 experiments that used an expression-picture matching task to investigate whether it also affects ambiguity resolution in comprehension. All experiments examined the interpretation of prepositional phrases that were…
Descriptors: Verbs, Language Processing, Comprehension, Form Classes (Languages)
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Park, H. – Second Language Research, 2004
Studies of the second language acquisition of pronominal arguments have observed that: (1) L1 speakers of null subject languages of the Spanish type drop more subjects in their second language (L2) English than first language (L1) speakers of null subject languages of the Korean type and (2) speakers of Korean-type languages drop more objects than…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Second Languages, Certification, Language Acquisition
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Matthews, Danielle; Lieven, Elena; Theakston, Anna; Tomasello, Michael – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
Choosing appropriate referring expressions requires assessing whether a referent is "available" to the addressee either perceptually or through discourse. In Study 1, we found that 3- and 4-year-olds, but not 2-year-olds, chose different referring expressions (noun vs. pronoun) depending on whether their addressee could see the intended referent…
Descriptors: Young Children, Age Differences, Form Classes (Languages), Nouns
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Nelson, Deborah G. Kemler; Herron, Lindsay; Holt, Morghan B. – Journal of Child Language, 2003
Two studies investigated whether four-year-old children (12 in Experiment 1 with a mean age of 4;8 and 36 in Experiment 2 with a mean age of 4;7) invent names for new artifacts based on the objects' functions as opposed to their perceptual properties. Children informed about the intended functions of novel objects provided more name innovations…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Form Classes (Languages), Classification, Perception
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Benelli, Beatrice; Belacchi, Carmen; Gini, Gianluca; Lucangeli, Daniela – Journal of Child Language, 2006
Some authors have suggested that definitional skills include metalinguistic components (Watson, 1985; Snow, 1990; McGhee-Bidlack, 1991). The present study therefore empirically investigated relations between the ability to define words and level of metalinguistic awareness in 280 Italian children (with ages ranging from 5 to 11 years) and in two…
Descriptors: Metalinguistics, Nouns, Definitions, Verbs
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Janssen, Dirk P.; Roelofs, Ardi; Levelt, Willem J. M. – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2004
Three experiments are reported that examined whether stem complexity plays a role in inflecting polymorphemic words in language production. Experiment 1 showed that preparation effects for words with polymorphemic stems are larger when they are produced among words with constant inflectional structures compared to words with variable inflectional…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Verbs, Coding, Experiments
Lew-Williams, Casey – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Six experiments explored how native and non-native Spanish speakers process article-noun sequences in real time, using eye movements as a response measure. Can listeners use gender-marked articles ("la" and "el", the feminine and masculine forms of "the") to rapidly identify familiar and novel nouns? In Experiment 1, adults who learned Spanish as…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Language Processing, Sentences, Cues
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Muller, Ulrich; Miller, Michael R.; Michalczyk, Kurt; Karapinka, Aaron – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2007
The present study had two major goals. The first goal was to assess the relative difficulty among different versions of the unexpected contents task by systematically varying the dimensions of grammatical mood (indicative vs. subjunctive) and person (self vs. other), and to examine the correlational pattern between these different versions of the…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Form Classes (Languages), Grammar, Logical Thinking
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Schulte, K. – Language Sciences, 2007
It is cross-linguistically common for languages to undergo a diachronic increase in the range of adverbial notions that can be expressed by means of infinitival constructions, and the Romance languages are a good example of this process. Examining the development of adverbial "prepositional infinitive" constructions in Spanish, Portuguese and…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Morphemes, Romance Languages, Spanish
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Kupisch, Tanja – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2007
This study addresses the question of whether language dominance and cross-linguistic influence are related by investigating the acquisition of determiner omission in four bilingual German-Italian children. The study begins by showing that monolingual Italian learners omit determiners less extensively than monolingual German learners. If bilingual…
Descriptors: Language Dominance, Form Classes (Languages), Linguistics, Monolingualism
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Pouscoulous, Nausicaa; Noveck, Ira A.; Politzer, Guy; Bastide, Anne – Language Acquisition: A Journal of Developmental Linguistics, 2007
Much developmental work has been devoted to "scalar implicatures." These are implicitly communicated propositions linked to relatively weak terms (consider how "Some" pragmatically implies "Not all") that are more likely to be carried out by adults than by children. Children tend to retain the linguistically encoded…
Descriptors: Language Processing, French, Language Research, Language Acquisition
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Nayan, Surina; Jusoff, Kamaruzaman – International Education Studies, 2009
Students in higher learning institutions need to write lots of reports based on the projects done. Since they are at the tertiary level of education, they are required to use English in their reports. This is to ensure that they are able to function well in English later at the workplace. Writing requires students to apply rules regarding sentence…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grammar, Verbs, Form Classes (Languages)
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Orgassa, Antje; Weerman, Fred – Second Language Research, 2008
In this article we compare five groups of learners acquiring Dutch gender as marked on determiners and adjectival inflection. Groups of L1 (first language) children and L1-SLI (first-language specific-language-impairment) children are compared to three Turkish-Dutch L2 (second language) groups: adult L2, child L2 and child L2-SLI. Overall, our…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Second Language Learning, Language Impairments, Indo European Languages
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Futagi, Yoko; Deane, Paul; Chodorow, Martin; Tetreault, Joel – Computer Assisted Language Learning, 2008
This paper describes the first prototype of an automated tool for detecting collocation errors in texts written by non-native speakers of English. Candidate strings are extracted by pattern matching over POS-tagged text. Since learner texts often contain spelling and morphological errors, the tool attempts to automatically correct them in order to…
Descriptors: Native Speakers, English (Second Language), Limited English Speaking, Computational Linguistics
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