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Tai, James; Hu, Wenze – Journal of the Chinese Language Teachers Association, 1991
Identifies motives for the inversion of various preverbal elements to the end of sentences in Beijing conversational discourse, focusing on such communicative functions and organizational mechanisms as thematization, repair, and afterthought appendage. (32 references) (CB)
Descriptors: Chinese, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries, Language Patterns
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Ernst, Thomas – Journal of the Chinese Language Teachers Association, 1991
Reviews a wide-ranging formal analysis of Chinese syntax that explores the role of case theory in the phrase structure of Chinese. (15 references) (CB)
Descriptors: Chinese, Distinctive Features (Language), Language Patterns, Language Research
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Hawkins, John A. – Journal of Linguistics, 1991
Examines a set of traditional problems involving the indefinite article and its contrast with the definite article in English. The variability in definite interpretations and the nature of the contrast between "a" and "the" is illustrated, and an explanation for cooccurrence restrictions involving the definite article is provided. (62 references)…
Descriptors: Determiners (Languages), English, Grammar, Linguistic Theory
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Newman, Michael – Language in Society, 1992
In an examination of pronominal disagreements, this study examined how speakers on certain television interview programs resolve problems of agreement with formally singular epicene antecedents. The form most frequently used is "they," and some forms found in written English hardly occur. (54 references) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Grammar, Language Patterns, Language Usage
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Wang, Mingquan – Journal of the Chinese Language Teachers Association, 1990
Demonstrates how the important distinction between the locative and nonlocative implication of a noun is essential for the presence of the Chinese locative particle "li," identifying groups of nouns that can not take the particle, nouns that optionally use the particle, and nouns that must use the particle. (CB)
Descriptors: Chinese, Distinctive Features (Language), Morphemes, Nouns
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Nishiyama, Kunio – Journal of East Asian Linguistics, 1999
Analyzes two seemingly different types of adjectives in Japanese and claims they share fundamentally similar phrase structures. Discusses the hypothesis that there is a phrase for predication. Japanese adjectives show morphological corroboration for this phrase, which is referred to as the predicative copula. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Adjectives, Japanese, Linguistic Theory, Morphology (Languages)
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Matsumoto, Kazuko – Language Sciences, 2000
Examines informal Japanese conversations between 16 pairs of same-sex friends to explore the preferred information structure of the intonation unit and the preferred clause structure in terms of the number and type of arguments contained per clause. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Databases, Intonation, Japanese
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Geisler, Christer – Language Variation and Change, 1998
Looks at infinitival relative clauses, such as "Mary is the person to ask," and their distribution in spoken English. Analyzes the correlation between the function of the antecedent in the relative clause and the function of the whole postmodified noun phrase in the matrix clause. (Author/JL)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English, Nouns, Oral Language
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Tao, Hongyin; McCarthy, Michael J. – Language Sciences, 2001
Reexamines the notion of non-restrictive relative clauses (NRRCs) in light of spoken corpus evidence, based on analysis of 692 occurrences of non-restrictive "which"-clauses in British and American spoken English data. Reviews traditional conceptions of NRRCs and recent work on the broader notion of subordination in spoken grammar.…
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, Grammar, Indexes, North American English
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Groefsema, Marjolein – Language Sciences, 2001
Challenges assumptions regarding dative alternation and proposes an account in terms of one general constraint of what makes a verb a possible verb, which operates over verb-specific conceptual information. Central to the proposal is the assumption that the different forms of dative verbs do not only encode different conceptual representations of…
Descriptors: Linguistic Theory, Nouns, Phrase Structure, Schemata (Cognition)
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Feng, Fangfang; Croft, W. Bruce – Information Processing & Management, 2001
This study proposes a probabilistic model for automatically extracting English noun phrases for indexing or information retrieval. The technique is based on a Markov model, whose initial parameters are estimated by a phrase lookup program with a phrase dictionary, then optimized by a set of maximum entropy parameters. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: English, Entropy, Indexing, Information Retrieval
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Greenbaum, Sidney; Nelson, Gerald – World Englishes, 1996
Investigates the position of adverbial clauses in a subset consisting of 42 texts drawn from 6 text types, 3 from written English and 3 from spoken English. The article identifies factors influencing the position choice for various types of adverbial clauses. Findings indicate that clause length is not a significant positional factor. (nine…
Descriptors: Adverbs, Foreign Countries, Grammar, Oral Language
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Dalrymple, Mary; Kaplan, Ronald M. – Language, 2000
Presents a theory of feature representation that accounts for feature indeterminacy and feature resolution within the lexical functional grammar (LFG) framework. The representations discussed, together with minimal extensions of LFG's description language, enable a simple and intuitive characterization of both these phenomena. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Linguistic Theory, Phrase Structure, Second Languages
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Gavruseva, Elena; Thornton, Rosalind – Language Acquisition, 2001
Investigated children's acquisition of short- and long-distance "whose"-questions to see whether children know that, in English, the entire "whose"-phrase must pied-pipe to the specifier of complementizer. Subjects were English-speaking children, ages 4-6. phrase. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Child Language, English, Language Acquisition, Linguistic Theory
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Pintzuk, Susan – Language Sciences, 2002
Examines the effects of morphological case on the position of objects in Old English in terms of both formal syntactic accounts and functional explanations. Quantitative analysis of Old English clauses with non-finite main verbs and noun phrase objects demonstrates that overt case-marking, whether ambiguous or unambiguous, has no effect on the…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Morphology (Languages), Old English, Phrase Structure
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