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McDaniel, Barbara Albrecht – 1979
An examination of the stylistic differences among writing from literary specialists, from science, and from social science shows that a more precise diagnosis of the writing problems of clarity and coherence is possible. Ten randomly selected paragraphs from each of four publications, the "Canadian Medical Association Journal," the "Canadian…
Descriptors: Communication Problems, Discourse Analysis, Language Research, Language Styles
Ehri, Linnea C.; Muzio, Irene M. – 1973
This study explored the viability of several theories in describing adjective memory. For the study, college students were told either to form images or to learn sentences. A noun-prompted sentence recall task exposed their memory for adjectives modifying either subject nouns. Results revealed that subject modifiers were better remembered than…
Descriptors: Adjectives, College Students, Educational Research, Higher Education
Eisenhardt, Catheryn T. – 1974
Just as a reader must bring an experiential conceptual background to the printed page, so must he bring an ability to recognize the graphic cues that signal meaning. The graphic cues or structural meaning works as a system the description of which can be outlined in three parts as the vocabulary, the structure, and the sound. What has been…
Descriptors: Intonation, Linguistics, Punctuation, Reading
Russell, James S. – 1973
The grammar which is concerned with meaning (the province of New Semantics), with its foundations in our perceptions of the surrounding world, can be learned in the elementary classroom through storytelling. Understanding of the sentence concept develops by allowing the child to use his language responsively and deliberately to organize the world…
Descriptors: Childhood Interests, Elementary Education, Grammar, Semantics
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McTear, Michael F. – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, 1979
Reviews aspects of Halliday's Systemic-Functional Grammar, emphasizing language functions, modality vs modulation, process types, transitivity, information distribution, and cohesion. Implications for language teaching are discussed. (AM)
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Grammar, Intonation
Woodley, Marie-Paule – 1987
The so-called deviant character of a set of non-native texts is examined by looking closely at how sentence syntax realizes and affects textual functions. Two broad groups of syntactic phenomena are considered: subordination and "marked structures," such as passives and clefts. Emphasis in this paper is on the following four ways in which syntax…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, English, Foreign Countries, French
Ruffin, Patrick S. J. – 1983
Prepositions are usually presented as prepositions of time or place, and prepositions associated with certain verbs and adjectives. However, this type of presentation overlooks the bases for preposition usage and in turn fails to convey those bases to learners. An alternative approach to the analysis of prepositions from a notional perspective is…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Function Words, Higher Education, Language Patterns
Hristova, Doreana – 1990
A discussion of pragmatics looks at and compares a variety of statement types in Macedonian and French. Based on the assumption that the most important semantic and syntactic elements are presented by the speakers themselves as well as by the temporal and spatial markers, the function of the statement form is examined. Focus is on the use of the…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Determiners (Languages), Foreign Countries, French
Lantolf, James P. – 1990
A study is presented that examines the null-subject parameter (NSP) and that seeks to attain the following objectives: (1) to assess the validity of the implicational hierarchy for the NSP, especially as proposed by Liceras (1989); and (2) to determine if there is any evidence to support the theory of the Weaker Logical Problem of Acquisition…
Descriptors: Grammar, Higher Education, Interlanguage, Language Patterns
Corrigan, Dennis M. – 1982
To increase knowledge about the nature of news (particularly its valuation and presentation conventions), to enrich understanding of communication conventions in our society through the study of news communication, and to fashion a tool that can be used to charge and change such conventions, a study examined the content of all news articles…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Content Analysis, Journalism, Literary Devices
Sulzby, Elizabeth – 1982
A study required children to tell and to dictate stories that were real and make believe, all about the same basic topic, as part of things people do when they "write a story." A further purpose was to explore the reading knowledge of children who are just beginning to read. Children's reading attempts for these stories were used to…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Emergent Literacy, Fantasy, Imagination
Frawley, William – 1981
This paper is an empirical study of Dryer's (1980) universal hierarchy of positions of sentential complements as a predictor of second language acquisition. The place of universal grammar in second language research is discussed, as is Dryer's hierarchy and preliminary psycholinguistic evidence in support of it. The results of an experiment…
Descriptors: English, Language Acquisition, Language Research, Language Universals
Rosner, Mary; Paul, Terri – 1981
In spite of the growth in popularity of sentence combining over the last 20 years, few teachers use it in technical writing classes, either because the exercises are inappropriate or because teachers fear that sentence combining will teach students to write longer rather than better sentences. Sentence combining can, however, teach technical…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Higher Education, Paragraph Composition, Sentence Combining
Stoddard, Sally – 1978
Stylistics, the art of making effective choices in writing, depends on synonymy. This means that writers, depending on the purpose, the audience, and the context of their messages, will rephrase those messages to improve their effectiveness. Paraphrasing messages to fit the needs of particular situations depends on a number of stylistic variables…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Styles, Language Usage, Rhetoric
Wolfe, Frank – 1978
In translating perception into written language, a child must learn an encoding process which is a continuation of the process of improving sensing of the world around him or her. To verbalize an object (a perception) we use frames which name a referent, locate the referent in space and time, identify its appearance and behavior, and define terms…
Descriptors: Determiners (Languages), Form Classes (Languages), Grammar, Intermediate Grades
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