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Showing 16 to 30 of 80 results Save | Export
Jacobs, George; And Others – 1988
A study investigated the effect of pausing, a component of speech speed, on the listening comprehension of second language learners. Groups of subjects at two ability levels listened to taped versions of two brief lectures recorded with four different combinations of speed and pausing conditions. Comprehension was measured by means of cloze tests…
Descriptors: Language Proficiency, Language Research, Language Rhythm, Listening Comprehension
Coombs, Virginia M. – 1981
This paper discusses how an understanding of speech acts contributes to the communicative competence in foreign language learning. Reviewing John Searle's five categories of speech acts (1976), the directive is discussed in terms of its manifestations in various foreign languages. Examples of directives in English, German, French, and Spanish are…
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Grammar, Pragmatics, Second Language Learning
Westbrook, Colston R. – 1975
Information is presented in this paper regarding suprasegmental features of Black English thay may cause reading interference for some Black children. Much of the research concerning reading problems of many Afro-American students stresses the segmental differences of the phonology, the morphology, the syntax, and lexical selection between two…
Descriptors: Black Dialects, Dialect Studies, Language Research, Linguistics
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Goad, Heather – 1989
A study investigated the order of acquisition of inflectional morphology in English within morphemes, focusing on late acquisition of one allomorph of the plural. It is proposed that late acquisition is rooted in the operation of the Obligatory Contour Principle (OCP), which states that at the melodic level, adjacent identical elements are…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Grammar
Paul-Brown, Diane; Yeni-Komshian, Grace H. – 1984
A study of the phonetic changes occurring when a speaker attempts to revise an unclear word for a listener focuses on changes made in the sound segment duration to maximize differences between phonemes. In the study, five-year-olds were asked by adults to revise words differing in voicing of initial and final stop consonants; a control group of…
Descriptors: Child Language, Communication Problems, Communication Skills, Language Acquisition
Smith, E. L., Jr. – 1982
A recurring question in the study of the specialized English used in various technical disciplines is the degree to which contextual variables--including subject matter--account for the particular distributions of lexicogrammatical features in texts of different disciplines. Two contextual variables related to role relationships in the semiotic…
Descriptors: Audiences, Interpersonal Relationship, Sentence Structure, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
Marfo, Charles Ofosu – 2002
This paper discusses the phonology-syntax interface in Akan, a language spoken in Ghana and the Cote d'Ivoire, describing a medium of exchange between phonology and syntax. Studies in lexical phonology have distinguished two levels in phonology--lexical and post-lexical--based on how and where phonological rules apply, although some phonological…
Descriptors: Akan, Foreign Countries, Grammar, Language Patterns
Hannahs, S. J. – 1989
An analysis of high vowel variation in Quebec French shows that the phenomenon can generally be accounted for in terms of stress and syllabic closure. However, it is also proposed that by positing underlying lax high vowels in the language, a more insightful analysis is achieved, suggesting that a process of high vowel tensing is occurring…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, French, Language Research, Language Variation
Homma, Yayoi – 1975
One characteristic of Japanese pitch accent is that there is the so-called "flat" accent, which has no fall or nucleus. This type of accent exists not only in Standard Japanese but in many dialects, including Kyoto. But the flat types are different in the Tokyo and Kyoto dialects. In the Tokyo dialect, the first syllable always has a low…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Dialect Studies, Intonation, Japanese
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Burton-Hunter, Sarah K. – 1975
Under the assumption that, with the exception of certain learned, retarded, and borrowed words, the bulk of any language undergoes sound changes that are regular over any given geographical area, over any given time span, and in any given sound environment, these sound changes have been reduced to logical terms and have been programmed to generate…
Descriptors: Computational Linguistics, Computer Programs, Diachronic Linguistics, Etymology
Ikeda, Yumi; Masataka, Nobuo – 1997
This study examined the speech behavior of Japanese women when interacting with young children. Sixty-one single Japanese-speaking women, ages 18-26, were recorded as they read aloud picture books to a 1-year-old child and as they conversed with another Japanese-speaking adult woman. When their utterances were acoustically compared between the two…
Descriptors: Caregiver Child Relationship, Caregiver Speech, Family Size, Females
Ka, Omar – 1988
A structural analysis provides new evidence concerning the internal structure of the syllable in Wolof, a West African language, through examination of the secret code called Kall, spoken mainly in Senegal's Ceneba area. It is proposed that Kall is better described as involving primarily a reduplication of the prosodic word. The first section…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Morphology (Languages)
Chun, Dorothy M. – 1987
An acoustic study of German focused on voice frequency at sentence-, turn-, and discourse-end in conversations. The data were drawn from short dialogues in which the same word occurs at the ends of utterances, in the middle of a turn, at the end of a turn, and at the end of a discourse. The dialogues were read 10 times by a male and a female…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Cues, Cultural Context, Discourse Analysis
Andre, Elise – 1980
The practice of playing taped spoken French just before the beginning of a regular foreign language class rests on the premise that regular exposure to unedited foreign speech sensitizes one to its unique intonation, rhythm, and sounds. It is hypothesized that the ability to identify a language may be the first step in listening. A review of…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Language Research, Language Rhythm, Listening
Lewis, Jack Windsor – 1973
This paper is a critical survey of the work of various linguists in the field of English intonation studies. Crystal's work is cited as being particularly influential in the author's work. It is argued that there is a lack of progress in this field because of a preoccupation on the part of scholars with their own studies and their application and…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, English, English (Second Language), Intonation
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