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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
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Rose, Yvan – First Language, 2020
Ambridge's proposal cannot account for the most basic observations about phonological patterns in human languages. Outside of the earliest stages of phonological production by toddlers, the phonological systems of speakers/learners exhibit internal behaviours that point to the representation and processing of inter-related units ranging in size…
Descriptors: Phonology, Language Patterns, Toddlers, Language Processing
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Gustafson, Marianne – Volta Review, 2009
In "The Relation of Language to Mental Development and of Speech to Language Teaching," S.G. Davidson displayed several timeless insights into the role of speech in developing language and reasons for using speech as the basis for instruction for children who are deaf and hard of hearing. His understanding that speech includes more than merely…
Descriptors: Speech, Children, Deafness, Partial Hearing
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Varley, Rosemary; Whiteside, Sandra; Windsor, Fay; Fisher, Helen – Brain and Language, 2006
In a recent article, Aichert and Ziegler (2004) explore whether apraxia of speech (AOS) can be explained by disruption of the phonetic plans for high frequency syllables. This approach is a hybrid one, combining the notion of a mental syllabary with an explanation that the impairment in AOS results from reduced access to supra-segmental phonetic…
Descriptors: Syllables, Word Frequency, Phonetics, Suprasegmentals
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Schegloff, Emanuel A. – Language and Speech, 1998
Approaches prosody as one set of resources and practices among many by which participants interactively produce conversation and other talk-in interaction, examining three episodes of conversation that exemplify different orders of organization in which prosodic practices may be implicated. Reflects on what is needed for students of conversation…
Descriptors: Intonation, Morphology (Languages), Speech Communication, Suprasegmentals
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Strauss, Steven L. – Glossa, 1980
Morpheme distribution is declared sufficiently independent of phonological considerations to warrant a theory of autonomous morphology. The "maximal nesting principle" proposed requires that each affix be attached to a new nonterminal node. This principle forces a new analysis of "-ate" derived verbs and eliminates the morphological abstractions…
Descriptors: Componential Analysis, Generative Phonology, Morphology (Languages), Morphophonemics
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Lebrun, Yvan – Language Sciences, 1979
Discusses the relationship between language and sexuality, between speech and love. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Language, Sex (Characteristics), Sexuality
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Catach, Nina – Langue Francaise, 1980
Analyzes the nature of punctuation, its functions (syntactic, suprasegmental, and semantic), its role in written language, and punctuation as grapheme. (AM)
Descriptors: Graphemes, Phonemes, Punctuation, Semantics
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Swerts, Marc; Hirschberg, Julia – Language and Speech, 1998
Introduces a special issue that includes papers which focus on the relationship between prosody and conversation. The papers represent different research traditions (e.g., the ethnomethodological framework of dialog analyses and report case studies, quantitative study of large corpora, experimental research using elicited or constructed speech…
Descriptors: Language Research, Morphology (Languages), Research Methodology, Speech Communication
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Arua, Arua E. – Indian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 1999
Discusses some of the segmental and suprasegmental features that give Swazi English a unique accent. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Language Variation, Phonemes
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Schreiber, Peter A. – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1980
Contends that the acquisition of fluent reading competency involves beginning readers' tacit recognition that they must learn to compensate for the absence of prosodic cues in the written signal by making use of the cues that are preserved. (HOD)
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Language Acquisition, Literature Reviews, Reading Fluency
Nihalani, Paroo – IRAL, 1993
Arguing that the question of social acceptability of allophonic variations is not a linguistic issue, but rather an issue of social identity, the discussion considers the speech chain, language as a social activity with its "norms" for social acceptability, and the specific context where Singaporean English is a marker of social…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Foreign Countries, Phonemics, Phonology
Pearce, John – Use of English, 1983
Suggests that by reading aloud, students may come to a greater awareness of the three subsystems of the English punctuation system--inclusion, sentence stops, and sentence marks. (HOD)
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Oral Reading, Punctuation, Secondary Education
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Martin, Howard R. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1981
Defines speech melody, with special attention to the distinction between its prosodic and paralinguistic domains. Discusses the role of the prosodic characteristics (stress, center, juncture, pitch direction, pitch height, utterance unit, and utterance group) in producing meaning in speech. (JMF)
Descriptors: Intonation, Literature Reviews, Nonverbal Communication, Paralinguistics
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Williams, Miller – CEA Critic, 1980
The structural linguist's techniques for measuring stress, juncture, and gradations of pitch permit a closer study of a poem's movement than conventional scansion allows. (RL)
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Higher Education, Literary Criticism, Poetry
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Pennycook, Alastair – TESOL Quarterly, 1985
Discusses the components of paralanguage, that is, kinesics, proxemics, and paraverbal features. Argues that paralanguage plays a crucial role in human interaction and is highly culture-specific. Discusses its implications with respect to second language learning and ways in which it can be included in the second-language classroom. (SED)
Descriptors: Body Language, English (Second Language), Paralinguistics, Personal Space
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