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Ravid, Dorit; Mashraki, Yael Epel – Journal of Research in Reading, 2007
Employing prosody skillfully, one of the cornerstones of fluent reading, is an indicator of text comprehension. Morphological knowledge has been shown to underlie lexical acquisition and to be related to reading development. The relationship between reading comprehension, prosodic reading and morphological knowledge was investigated in 51…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Grade 4, Reading Comprehension, Semitic Languages
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Gisbert, David Duran; Font, Carles Monereo – School Psychology International, 2008
After examining several conceptual elements of peer-assisted learning and peer tutoring, this article presents a study analysing the effects of peer tutoring--with fixed and reciprocal roles--in the improvement of curricular competence of Catalan language skills, self-concept as a writer and satisfaction with pedagogical assistance. The results,…
Descriptors: Linguistic Competence, Tutors, Language Skills, Peer Teaching
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Suhua, Hu – Chinese Education and Society, 2008
In general, the vitality and social functions of a language are assessed in connection with such indices as the language's intergenerational transmission, the absolute number of speakers and proportion of speakers in the population, its present domains of use, its development within diverse domains of use, and the availability of its educational…
Descriptors: Language Maintenance, Bilingual Students, Language Usage, Questionnaires
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Rogers, Vaughan; McLeod, Wilson – Linguistics and Education: An International Research Journal, 2006
This paper examines the relationship between policy and politics in relation to the development of public-sector primary education through Breton and Gaelic, considering closely the patterns of power through which such provision is delivered. Brittany and Scotland present many similarities as culturally distinctive territories, contained within…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Politics, Uncommonly Taught Languages, Language Minorities
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Clifton, John M. – 1995
Kaki Ae is a non-Austronesian language spoken by about 300 people on the south coast of Papua New Guinea, at best distantly related to any other language in that area. A brief grammar sketch of the language is presented, including discussion of the phonology, sentences, phrases, words, and morpheme categories. Kaki Ae phonemics include 11…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Foreign Countries, Grammar, Language Classification
Locher, Michael A. – 1996
In Sundanese, a western Austronesian language, speech levels allow the speaker to establish social identity through talk alone, using multiple linguistic forms with very different pragmatic meanings. These words are deference and demeanor indexicals, as in the French formal versus informal second person. It is argued that although they do exist,…
Descriptors: Diglossia, Discourse Analysis, Language Patterns, Native Speakers
Pye, Clifton – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1996
K'iche' Maya divides the breaking and cutting domains into much more specific actions than either English or Spanish. K'iche' does not have a general word for breaking that can be substituted for the specialized breaking verbs in the way that English "break" can be used to describe more specific senses of picking, popping, smashing, or…
Descriptors: Deep Structure, Lexicology, Mayan Languages, Morphology (Languages)
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Smith, Karin, Comp.; Haake, Susan, Comp. – 1978
This catalog inventories the collection of books, monographs, serials and periodicals, dictionaries, pamphlets, ephemera, and correspondence concerning Esperanto in the collection of George Alan Connor housed at the University of Oregon Library. Overall, the catalog contains approximately 475 serial entries and 3,000 author entries. Connor was a…
Descriptors: Dictionaries, Esperanto, Information Sources, Letters (Correspondence)
Ponciano, John – 1991
Arabic loanwords in English and Spanish are discussed in separate sections, and the two situations are compared and contrasted. In the first section, Arabic loanwords in English are listed, and their history of incorporation and related research are reviewed. Of these, 27 are defined and discussed in greater detail. The second section addresses…
Descriptors: Arabic, Contrastive Linguistics, Diachronic Linguistics, English
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Kilgour, Heather; Hendrickson, Gail – Studies in Philippine Linguistics, 1992
The Bantoanon language has borrowed from Spanish and English, as well as from Hiligaynon and Tagalog. Many of the borrowed words have been assimilated into the Bantoanon phonemic patterns. In this paper on Bantoanon phonology, discussion focuses on the phonology of native Bantoanon words and the added phonemic patterns and phonemes resulting from…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Linguistic Borrowing, Phonemes, Phonology
Rankin, Robert L. – 1988
Proto-Siouan "one" is reconstructed in two versions from two separate cognate sets, both of which are defective in that each has been entirely lacking from one or another of the major Siouan subgroups. One of the sets for "one" is found in Mississippi Valley Siouan, and it contains the same root as the indefinite article that…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Anthropological Linguistics, Contrastive Linguistics, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
Armagost, James L. – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1990
St. Clair's Comanche texts, collected in 1902, appear to exhibit a very uncharacteristic form of objective case marking along with "same subject" dependent clause types unknown elsewhere in the language. Proper interpretation of the materials and the circumstances in which they were transcribed leads to an analysis in which…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Case (Grammar), Structural Analysis (Linguistics), Uncommonly Taught Languages
Hopkins, Jill D. – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1990
This paper examines spatial deixis in Chiwere (Siouan) in the framework of two theories of deixis. Denny (1978) attempts to define a set of distinctive features for spatial deixis, while Rauh (1983) uses spatial deixis as a template for organizing all deictic dimensions. Chiwere data suggest language and dimension specific expansion of both…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
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Proulx, Paul – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1990
Proto-Algonquian had six or seven orders (morphological types) of verbs. The potential order had three modes, the subordinative two, and by one interpretation, the conjunct had four. By another, all conjuncts are participles in the protolanguage. Evidentials include an attestive suppositive dubitative, and perhaps a recollective. Only a few…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Morphology (Languages), Structural Analysis (Linguistics), Syntax
Camilleri, Antoinette – Edinburgh Working Papers in Linguistics, 1992
This paper provides a sociolinguistic description of English language use in Malta at present in terms of who speaks what language, where and when. Some observations on English language contact with Maltese are made. Finally a brief discussion is taken up as to whether and to what extent it would be appropriate to consider Maltese English as a new…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Language Variation, Official Languages
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