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Peer reviewedHyams, Nina – Journal of Child Language, 1992
Argues that the data used to claim that morphosyntactic development of Italian-speaking children are inconsistent with nativist, parameter-setting models of language development is irrelevant to the specific hypothesis being evaluated. (25 references) (JL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Italian, Language Acquisition, Linguistic Theory
Peer reviewedStockman, Ida J.; Vaughn-Cooke, Fay – Child Development, 1992
Samples of the language used by 4 children were recorded longitudinally between 1.5 and 3 years of age. Children's expressions of motion were categorized into expressions involving a source, path, or goal of motion. There were developmental changes, including an increase in the use of words relating to goals as children grew older. (BC)
Descriptors: Adverbs, Language Acquisition, Lexicology, Longitudinal Studies
Peer reviewedBirner, Betty J,; Ward, Gregory L. – Journal of Linguistics, 1992
Demonstrates how syntactic constraints interact in the interpretation of Verb Phrase inversion. Specifically, it is shown that the auxiliary "be" is unique among auxiliary verbs in allowing VP inversion. (38 references) (VWL)
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, North American English, Pragmatics, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
Peer reviewedMassam, Diane – Journal of Linguistics, 1992
Analysis middle constructions in English, accounting for their key syntactic and semantic properties. The analysis rests on the observation that there are certain similarities between middle, "tough," and recipe-context null-object constructions. (55 references) (VWL)
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), English, Haitian Creole, Linguistic Theory
Peer reviewedDavis, Philip W. – Language Sciences, 1994
Outlines a way of conceiving the area of language identified by case or grammatical relation that does not rely on the specification of universal inventory. The alternative proposes the existence of principles of intelligence, which in their operation in language, yield the language performance that is interpreted as ROLES. (Contains 80…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Grammar, Intelligence, Language Universals
Peer reviewedAshby, William J. – Journal of French Language Studies, 1994
Provides an acoustic profile of the prosody of right-dislocations in French, using the CECIL computer hardware and software package to analyze 28 right-dislocations occurring in a corpus of natural French discourse. It was found that, although right-dislocations appear to fulfill various functional roles in discourse, no correlation appears…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Computer Software, Discourse Analysis, French
Peer reviewedBirner, Betty J. – Language, 1994
Presents a discourse-functional account of English inversion, based on an examination of a large corpus of naturally occurring tokens. It is argued that inversion serves an information-packaging function and that felicitous inversion depends on the relative discourse-familiarity of the information represented by the preposed and postposed…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English, Language Research, Language Usage
Peer reviewedKelly, Leonard P. – Perspectives in Education and Deafness, 1995
This study of 213 high school and 211 postsecondary students with deafness found that limited syntactic competence may limit a reader's ability to apply vocabulary skills for reading comprehension. Repeated Reading is described as a promising strategy for developing syntactic competence. (JDD)
Descriptors: Deafness, High Schools, Performance Factors, Postsecondary Education
Villa, Fernando – Rassegna Italiana di Linguistica Applicata, 1991
Analyzes Scientific English for nonnative speakers, in particular Italians, and points out the principal areas of difficulty. (CFM)
Descriptors: English for Science and Technology, Grammar, Morphology (Languages), Second Language Learning
Hosokowa, Hirofumi – Georgetown Journal of Languages and Linguistics, 1990
Summarizes some of the syntactic differences between English and Japanese in such areas as word order, wh-movement, subject-auxiliary inversion, expletives, multiple subject constructions, scrambling, and modifiable pro-forms in Japanese. (26 references) (CB)
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Distinctive Features (Language), English, Japanese
Peer reviewedMagnusson, Eva; Naucler, Kerstan – International Journal of Applied Linguistics, 1991
Data from a longitudinal study matching language-disordered and linguistically normal children are used to assess reading development from grade one to grade four. It is shown that good comprehenders use meaningful units more frequently than do poor comprehenders, that their reading errors are more often negligible, and that they violate syntactic…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Error Patterns, Language Handicaps, Longitudinal Studies
Xuelan, Fang; Kennedy, Graeme – RELC Journal: A Journal of Language Teaching and Research in Southeast Asia, 1992
Ways in which the notion of causation is expressed in written British English are examined in a study that collected 130 different expressive devices. The use of causative conjunctions was found to be the most frequent of eight major ways of marking causation, closely followed by causative adverbs. (21 references) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Adverbs, Classification, Conjunctions, English
Peer reviewedBright, William – Language, 1990
Texts in Classical Nahuatl from 1524, in the genre of formal oratory, reveal extensive use of lines showing parallel morphosyntactic and semantic structure. Analysis and translation of a passage point to the applicability of structural analysis to "expressive" as well as "referential" texts; and the importance of understanding…
Descriptors: Literature, Morphology (Languages), Oral Language, Semantics
Peer reviewedDavies, William D.; Sam-Colop, Luis Enrique – Language, 1990
Verb agreement in the K'iche' agentive voice appears to deviate from the ergative/absolutive system of other Mayan languages, leading some to treat agreement in the agentive as falling outside the regular agreement system as well as to differing views regarding appropriate syntactic representation of the agentive construction with respect to final…
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, Mayan Languages, Quiche, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
Peer reviewedMcCardle, Peggy; Wilson, Bruce – Journal of Communication Disorders, 1993
The FG syndrome is characterized by unusual facies; sudden infant death; developmental delay; and abnormalities of the cardiac, gastrointestinal, and central nervous systems. Serial evaluations of one case with isolated agenesis of the corpus callosum found consistent patterns over time in specific language impairments in syntactic and…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Congenital Impairments, Language Acquisition, Language Handicaps


