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Tabiri, Michael O.; Jones-Mensah, Ivy; Kongo, Angel E.; Budu, Gifty – Pegem Journal of Education and Instruction, 2022
The paper aims at discussing the difficulties that students from French speaking countries who are pursuing their education in a Ghanaian university face in identifying English determiners. This is a qualitative study that analysed the difficulties that level 100 Francophone students who have French as a Second Language(L2) and English as a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, French, College Students, Second Language Learning
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Peter, Mwinwelle; Benjamin, Amoakohene; Nicholas, Agyekum Obeng – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2020
Previous works on the analysis of anthems have focused on unearthing encoded latent meanings through the analysis of linguistic devices such as cohesive devices, deictic expressions, figures of speech, content words and clauses. However, the analysis of institutional anthems as a sub-genre of anthems has received minimal attention in linguistic…
Descriptors: Universities, Phrase Structure, Connected Discourse, Guidelines
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Ansah, Richard; Agbaglo, Ebenezer; Mensah, Regina A. T. – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2021
This study explored the differences in the writings produced by both male and female students in colleges of education in Ghana with respect to syntactic complexity. The study was based on a corpus of two hundred examination essays which were collected from two hundred students in Assin Fosu, Wesley and Presbyterian colleges of education who took…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Gender Differences, Sentence Structure, Writing (Composition)
Amenorvi, Cosmas Rai – Online Submission, 2019
The purpose of this paper is to investigate how the Ewe language realizes cohesion by means of conjunctions in comparison with English as well as the similarities and differences in the way the two languages realize cohesion in this regard. The findings revealed that both English and Ewe realize cohesion by conjunction almost the same way. The…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), African Languages, Bilingualism, English (Second Language)