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McLauchlan, Alastair – Babel, 2009
This paper addresses the complicated issue of attribution of gender in French nouns. Firstly, it presents a range of views on how native speakers address noun gender allocation, plus some insight into why they are accurate with most, but by no means all, gender attributions. Secondly, the paper explains some of the inconsistencies in noun gender…
Descriptors: Nouns, French, Native Speakers, Second Language Learning
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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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Akiyama, M. Michael; Williams, Nancy – Language Learning, 1996
Reports on two studies examining the effects of object size, container size, sex, and language group on the use of counts in prescriptive and descriptive grammar. Results indicate that people's selection of noun forms in a measure partitive noun phrase is influenced by nonlinguistic factors, such as their gender and the food size relative to…
Descriptors: College Students, Context Effect, English (Second Language), Grammar
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Bulow-Moller, Anne Marie – International Journal of Applied Linguistics, 1996
Argues that "information structure management" is an important and problematic part of the competence sought by nonnative speakers, particularly for goal-related discourse types where clarity and argumentative power play a role. Simulated negotiation material is used to demonstrate how certain nonnative structures hamper the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Communicative Competence (Languages), Contrastive Linguistics, Discourse Analysis
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Charters, A. Helen – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 1997
Examines why learners of Mandarin use overt nouns and pronouns to a greater extent than native speakers. Findings indicate that no single syntactic structure is a significant contributor to the different rates of optional ellipsis but that some learners use ellipsis only in syntactic contexts permissible in English and most use it in a narrower…
Descriptors: Adults, College Students, Context Effect, Discourse Analysis