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Showing 61 to 75 of 115 results Save | Export
Ree, Joe J. – 1975
It is a generally held view that Korean lacks articles and that the category "number" in this language is unproductive. That is, the nouns in Korean can be used freely as definite and indefinite, and as singular and plural, without overt grammatical markers. Contrary to this view, the claim is made in this paper that non-unique nouns,…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Determiners (Languages), Form Classes (Languages), Grammar
Hartnett, Carolyn G. – 1998
English nominalizations turn verbs and adjectives into nouns systematically, but their meanings can change unpredictably. In the United States, college composition handbooks urge students to avoid using nominalizations, but elsewhere secondary students learn to write them responsibly and to recognize being manipulated when reading them.…
Descriptors: Classification, Form Classes (Languages), Freshman Composition, Grammatical Acceptability
Lehman, Elyse Brauch; And Others – 1984
A study of children's and young adults' retention of words and their presentation modality addressed three issues: (1) how long the modality information is retained, (2) whether children or adults lose it more rapidly, and (3) whether the word or modality information is lost more rapidly. The study consisted of two experiments. In the first, 32…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, College Students, Comparative Analysis
Hofacker, Charles F. – 1983
Recently, confirmatory factor analysis has been extended to the case of dichotomous data (e.g., Muthen, 1978). In this study, confirmatory factor analysis was applied to all-or-none recall data from a designed experiment. In the experiment, subjects read pairs of English nouns and then tried to recall the right hand member of the pair when…
Descriptors: Data, Factor Analysis, Higher Education, Long Term Memory
Breen, Walter – 1988
An analysis of Korean case marking proposes an explanation for several aspects of marking, especially stacking and spreading, from a lexical perspective. The explanation has advantages over previous theories in that (1) it explains the morphology of Korean case marking without reference to several levels of syntactic derivation, including…
Descriptors: Case (Grammar), Dialect Studies, Grammar, Korean
Wrase, Judith – 1982
A system for teaching advanced English as second language students how to use "a,""an," and "the" in writing is described. In deciding whether to use a definite or indefinite article, the student is taught to ask three questions about the context and nature of the noun: (1) has it been mentioned before in the composition, (2) is there anything…
Descriptors: Determiners (Languages), English (Second Language), Grammar, Nouns
1979
Three experiments were conducted to assess the effects of nonbizarre vs. bizarre pictorial elaboration on the paired-associate retention of noun pairs. Five and seven year old children served as subjects in the first two experiments and learned a list of common noun pairs by the study-test paired-associate method. Experiment 1 provided a…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition
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Kee, Daniel W.; Nakayama, Susan Y. – 1977
The present study was conducted in order to evaluate pictorial elaboration effects in children's incidental paired-associate memory. The design of the experiment consisted of a 2 x 2 x 2 x 5 factorial with (1) grade level (kindergarten vs. second), (2) pictorial presentation (standard vs. elaborated), (3) list (two 14-pair lists of common noun…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition
Herschensohn, Julia – 1978
Previous accounts of "generic" have been either too broad in including several sentence types as generic, or too narrow in limiting the definition of generic to the noun or verb alone. This research critically examines data and previous treatments of the generic verb, generic noun, and generic sentence. Because every generic sentence may…
Descriptors: Determiners (Languages), English, Form Classes (Languages), French
Schwartz, Arthur – 1971
The paper proposes, on the basis of a study of relative clauses and WH-interrogative constructions, to reflect the time-oriented character of the sentence by replacing neutral expressions like "#" with explicit time references like "beginning" and "end." These boundaries are to be universally associated with all…
Descriptors: Deep Structure, Form Classes (Languages), Linguistic Theory, Nouns
Master, Peter – Online Submission, 1993
The determiners in English include three categories: predeterminers, central determiners, and postdeterminers. The focus of the present study is the central determiners because they comprise the largest group and because a minimum of one central determiner is required in the generation of any noun phrase. Furthermore, the central determiners have…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Discourse Communities, Nouns, Academic Discourse
Flognfeldt, Mona E. – 1984
A study of English nouns derived from verbs and ending in "-ee" is outlined. The objective was to determine whether those nouns exhibit verbal characteristics (aspectual, temporal, or modal) that can be attributed to their derivation from verbs. The study examined 209 nouns. Progress made in the investigation of four hypotheses is…
Descriptors: English, Etymology, Idioms, Language Research
Bull, Tove – 1987
The noun phrase of the Norwegian dialect of the multilingual village of Skibotn, in northern Norway, is analyzed. Attention is focused on the possible influence of two other languages, Finnish, an imported language, and Sami, the original language of the area, in the development of three different clusters of features characteristic of nominal…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Diachronic Linguistics, Finnish, Foreign Countries
Cannon, Garland – Meta, 1979
Examines the syntactic aspects of affixation and compounding, processes accounting for the great majority of new word formations documented in "6,000 Words" (1976). (AM)
Descriptors: Adjectives, Conference Reports, Form Classes (Languages), Language Patterns
Horie, Kaoru; Saito, Noriko – 1996
The grammatical phenomenon in Japanese known as Ga-No conversion is examined. In this phenomenon, the nominative particle "ga" can be converted to genitive particle "no" in embedded sentences with a nominal head such as a relative clause or complementary clause. A pragmatic constraint to this conversion that has not previously been explored is…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, English, Foreign Countries, Form Classes (Languages)
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