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Hodges, Richard E. – 1984
Intended for administrators and policymakers as well as teachers, this digest explores researchers' current understanding of English spelling and its acquisition as the basis for spelling instruction methods other than memorization. After defining spelling and the relationship between spoken English and its written system, the digest explores how…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Language Acquisition, Language Arts, Language Research
Silverstein, Michael – 1981
A study of the limits of native speakers' awareness of, and ability to express, the dimensions of his language for the researcher investigates this hypothesis: that the ease or difficulty of a native speaker's characterization of the use of the forms of his own language depends on certain general semiotic properties of the use in question.…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Encoding (Psychology), Language Research, Language Styles
Randall, Janet H. – 1984
A line of reasoning used in recent research on language acquisition assumes that a child acquiring the language has only two reliable sources of information available about the target grammar: a set of grammatical principles and the primary data of the language spoken around him. A third kind of evidence, negative evidence, would be helpful but is…
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Generalization, Grammar
Arrieta, Kutz; And Others – 1986
The extent to which Basque displays ergative characteristics (an ergative language treats the underlying subject of intransitive clauses alike in some manner and differently from the underlying subject of transitive clauses) in its syntax is examined. The amount of evidence needed to conclude that Basque or any other language is ergative is…
Descriptors: Basque, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Laka, Itziar; Uriagereka, Juan – 1986
The theoretical generalization that no lexical material can occur between a Wh-element and a verb in any clause in Basque is challenged, and it is argued that case is not assigned structurally in the Basque language. The account demonstrates how a number of well documented properties of Basque may combine to produce this grammatical result, and an…
Descriptors: Basque, Case (Grammar), Descriptive Linguistics, Language Research
Janda, Richard D.; Joseph, Brian D. – 1988
In this paper the morphological argument for the conditioning of Sanskrit aspiration and deaspiration is renewed in theoretically current terms, bringing forth new arguments and examining previously undiscussed major weaknesses in the purely phonological (autosegmental) argument. Relevant phonological, morphological, and lexical facts are…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Valimaa-Blum, Riitta – 1988
The order of constituents in Finnish clauses having free word order is analyzed. It is proposed that these clauses are defined only in terms of their immediate constituency, and that the logically possible permutations of these constituents form another set of sequence constructions, which transcend individual clause types. Each sequence…
Descriptors: Finnish, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Mervis, Carolyn B. – 1989
Two types of operating principles thought to play an important role in early lexical development are discussed. The principles are those concerned with: (1) assignment of reference or meaning to words; and (2) formation and evolution of categories. Discussion also addresses related issues, such as the developmentally important relationship between…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Language Acquisition
Lin, Ziyu – 1985
Because Mandarin Chinese is a language without much morphology in case, number, and gender; i.e., an uninflectional analytical language in which word order plays a decisive role in determining the semantics of a sentence; it seems inconvenient to investigate the language in the framework of relational grammar (RG); which depends heavily on case…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Grammar, Language Research, Mandarin Chinese
Prince, Ellen F. – 1988
An analysis of two different WH-clause types (relative clauses and free relatives/indirect questions) in Yiddish investigates the acceptability of a gap in the first position. A model is presented that accounts for the differences between the two by positing three constraints on their formation. It is then argued that either these constraints…
Descriptors: Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Saleemi, Anjum P. – 1988
Children's ability to learn aspects of their language in the absence of supportive evidence is discussed. Specifically, the learnability of null subjects in languages in which they appear is examined when indirect negative evidence is present. It is concluded that parameters such as the null subject parameter may not generate languages, strictly…
Descriptors: Child Language, Difficulty Level, Grammar, Language Acquisition
Guice, Stephen A. – 1987
The contributions of Peter Stephen DuPonceau and John Pickering to American linguistics in the early nineteenth century are reviewed and discussed. Despite their probable status as amateurs in the study of American Indian languages and their very limited fieldwork, they made some significant contributions to the general field of language studies…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Authors, Grammar, Intellectual History
Cook, Kenneth William – 1987
A study of the Samoan "-cia" suffix is presented. It argues that, contrary to prevailing theory, Samoan does have an active/passive contrast but that it is indicated by a difference in word order rather than by verbal morphology. It is shown, however, that "-cia" is similar to a passive suffix in that passive involves the…
Descriptors: Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Morphemes, Morphology (Languages)
Birdsong, David – 1987
The utility of negative evidence as input for grammar construction in second language learning is examined. Three issues are dealt with in this paper: (1) the arguments for and against negative evidence in first and second language acquisition are paralleled; (2) the question is situated within the larger issues of learner end-products and the…
Descriptors: Feedback, Grammar, Language Processing, Language Research
Redish, Janice C. – 1981
The status and future of bureaucratic language is explored and four specific issues are addressed: (1) the characteristics of bureaucratic writing; (2) how it developed and what keeps it from changing; (3) where pressures for change come from; and (4) what can be done to foster greater literacy in bureaucratic writing among both writers and users…
Descriptors: Bureaucracy, Communications, Government Publications, Higher Education
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