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Showing 31 to 45 of 403 results Save | Export
Liu, Lening; Chu, Chauncey – 1993
This paper examines the role of movable adverbs in Mandarin Chinese. In terms of their position within a sentence, most Mandarin adverbs can be classified as movable or non-movable. While identification of either class may be based on their semantic categories or on the number of syllables, the motivation for placing a movable adverb in front of…
Descriptors: Adverbs, Conjunctions, Grammar, Language Usage
Birner, Betty J.; Ward, Gregory L. – 1989
The correlation of syntactic form with discourse function has become a central research area in linguistic pragmatics and discourse analysis. Most studies have proceeded on a construction-by-construction basis, failing to note significant generalizations across sentence types. One significant exception identifies a set presuppositional…
Descriptors: Classification, English, Form Classes (Languages), Language Research
Cheshire, Jenny – 1988
Three linguistic features used in spontaneous conversation to express emotional involvement (this, never, and all) are analyzed. "All" and "never" have referential functions; "this" has both referential and deictic functions. The focus of this analysis is on the way that speakers use these features to express emotional involvement and to orient…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries, Grammar, Interpersonal Communication
Anani, Mohammad – 1984
This paper studies the variety of Arabic imperative sentences, which are seen as the result of an interrelated set of choices made from a limited number of binary systems, and analyzes their occurrence in different situations. Where possible, relevant features of Arabic imperative structures are compared with their nearest English equivalents. The…
Descriptors: Arabic, Comparative Analysis, Contrastive Linguistics, English
Stromswold, Karin – 1988
A study examined 12 preschool children's early use of "who,""what," and "which" questions in spontaneous speech. Results indicated that children began to ask object questions before they asked subject questions, and acquired argument questions before adjunct questions. It was suggested that the two results could…
Descriptors: Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Research, Pragmatics
Nagai, Noriko – 1987
A discussion of Japanese topic construction argues that topicalization is merely an attachment of the topic particle "wa". It also proposes that other operations associated with this construction, such as movement and base-generation, are not specifically related to topicalization but can be explained in terms of more general rules of…
Descriptors: Grammar, Japanese, Phrase Structure, Sentence Structure
Klauk, E. Russell – 1984
The reader-centered emphasis dominating the current literature reflects an assumption that what is learned from text, and how much is learned, is determined primarily by the reader. An alternative thesis, however, is that much of the responsibility for text comprehensibility may lie with the producer of the text. That is, the text needs to be…
Descriptors: Authors, Cognitive Processes, Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition)
Vande Kopple, William J. – 1982
There are three dominant conceptions of functional sentence perspective (FSP): (1) a sentence should be analyzed into several segments, each having a different degree of what is called communicative dynamism; (2) a sentence should be analyzed into two segments, the theme and the rheme; and (3) a sentence should be analyzed into two segments, the…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Discourse Analysis, Linguistic Theory, Paragraphs
Rodman, Lilita – 1981
Almost every discussion of technical or scientific writing style mentions the passive voice as a stylistic choice to avoid. However, the passive voice does have legitimate uses in technical and scientific writing--the problem is to define the appropriate or effective uses and the inappropriate or ineffective ones. An examination of passive voice…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Language Styles, Language Usage, Sentence Structure
Milstein, Barney M. – 1974
Drills in German word order were developed by use of random generation of sentences coupled with the Ohio State edit function. Differences between English and German word orders are a cause of interference in the learning of German structural patterns. German word order may be manipulated in some situations and must be in others. Although the…
Descriptors: Computer Programs, Drills (Practice), German, Language Instruction
Starosta, Stanley – 1973
This research is the result of 10 weeks of field work in Taiwan during the summer of 1972. It consists of a description, analysis, and comparison of the morphologically marked causative verbs in Rukai, Bunun, Tsou, Anis, Seedig, and Saisiyat. The theoretical framework employed is a type of case grammar referred to as "lexicase," a…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Generative Grammar, Grammar, Linguistics
Nilsen, Don L.F. – 1976
The notions of recursiveness and deletion are discussed in the context of Chomsky's presentations of transformational grammar in "Syntactic Structures" and in the later work, "Aspects of the Theory of Syntax." After consideration of word-recursion, coordinate-clause recursion, and subordinate-clause recursion, extensions to…
Descriptors: Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis, English, Linguistic Theory
Spilka, Irene V. – Meta, 1979
Reviews the grammatical, semantic, and stylistic difficulties in translating English passive constructions into French. (AM)
Descriptors: English, French, Grammar, Language Styles
Goodluck, Helen; And Others – 1989
A study investigated young children's knowledge of the constraint that prevents questioning from a position inside a temporal adjunct: i.e., knowledge of the ungrammaticality of a question such as "Who did Fred kiss Sue before hugging...?" Subjects were 30 children aged 3 to 5 years, who listened to stories accompanied by pictures and…
Descriptors: Child Language, Grammar, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Cowart, Wayne – 1985
An experiment replicating earlier research on the pronoun bias effect in reading comprehension, in which the pronoun "they" in an auditory fragment influences the syntactic analysis of an ambiguous expression, used a new technique in which words in a fragment are cumulated on an electronic monitor rather than being presented one by one.…
Descriptors: Computer Oriented Programs, Context Clues, Pronouns, Reading Comprehension
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