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Afendras, Evangelos A. – 1969
Language contact and the resulting interference has long been diagnosed as one of the primary forces behind language change. In cases of multilingual contact within geographically restricted areas, converging changes of the languages in contact have been uncovered and described. The geographic areas characterized by such linguistic situations came…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Dialect Studies, Dialects, Ethnology
von Raffler-Engel, Walburga; Hasham, Brenda Hopson – 1976
Linguistic research has paid little attention to "fillers." These so-called "hesitation forms" can be classified as being either "buffers" or "back channel elicitors," the former being self-primers, and the latter being other-directed. These forms are difficult to distinguish without access to kinesic and…
Descriptors: Black Youth, Body Language, Communication (Thought Transfer), Discourse Analysis
Murray, Bruce A.; And Others – 1993
A study examined whether reading alphabet books to prekindergarten children increased their awareness of sounds spoken in words. Subjects, 42 mainly low-income African-American children (63% of whom were boys) in three intact prekindergarten classes in three public elementary schools in a small southeastern city, were administered three pretest…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Black Students, Classroom Research, Emergent Literacy
Frerichs, Linda C. – 1993
An exploratory study investigated the relationship between perceptions and practices in reading and language arts, and examined whether teachers were using practices to develop students' literacy skills suggested in work by Marie Clay. Subjects, 16 out of a possible 22 kindergarten teachers in one southern school district, responded to a 138-item…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Kindergarten, Language Arts, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Kamii, Constance; And Others – 1987
A study examined the phoneme-grapheme correspondence in native English-speaking kindergartners' spelling and compared it to the results of similar research with Spanish-speaking children. It tested the hypothesis that English-speaking children make their first grapheme-sound correspondences differently because of phonological differences in the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, English, Error Patterns, Kindergarten
Moon, Gui-Sun – 1987
A discussion of the nasal harmony of Aguaruna, a language of the Jivaroan family in South America, approaches the subject from the viewpoint of generative phonology. This theory of phonology proposes an underlying nasal consonant, later deleted, that accounts for vowel nasalization. Complex rules that suppose a complex system of vowel and…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Diachronic Linguistics, Distinctive Features (Language), Generative Phonology
Scliar-Cabral, Leonor; And Others – 1990
This study investigated the relative ability of literate (n=24), semi-literate (n=45), and non-literate (n=21) adults to erase the initial consonant or vowel from non-words and pronounce the remaining phonemes. It was hypothesized that difficulty in removing the initial consonant from the vowel with which it coarticulates is due not only to…
Descriptors: Adults, Comparative Analysis, Context Clues, Error Patterns
Karimer, Lisa – 1984
A study of the effectiveness of music and rhythm used in classroom activities as a technique for developing short-term memory for phonological learning had as subjects 25 adult Cambodian, Lao, Hmong, and Vietnamese immigrants, students in a course in English as a second language. The subjects were given a pretest of their ability to distinguish…
Descriptors: Adults, Auditory Discrimination, Cambodians, Classroom Techniques
Foorman, Barbara R.; Liberman, Dov – 1988
Investigating how good and poor readers process words, a study examined the spelling and reading processes of 80 middle-class first grade students from three schools in Houston, Texas, 40 who were receiving whole word instruction, and 40 receiving phonics instruction. Based on scores from the Gates-McGinitie Reading Test, Basic R (administered in…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Decoding (Reading), Grade 1, Oral Reading
West, Richard F.; And Others – 1982
The present study employed discrete trial procedures to compare the performance of skilled and less-skilled third and sixth grade readers (N=37) on picture, letter and word naming tasks. It was assumed that if lack of proficiency in reading skill is due to a general name-retrieval deficit, then the skilled readers would be able to name each…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Comparative Analysis, Decoding (Reading), Dyslexia
Menasche, Lionel – 1975
Using the notion of interlanguage, this paper illustrates how a useful characterization may be obtained of some aspects of the English of Shona speakers. The interference hypothesis in language learning is demoted, while the interlanguage hypothesis in which interference plays a part, is promoted. Application of the interlanguage concept…
Descriptors: African Languages, Bantu Languages, Bilingual Students, English (Second Language)
Kreidler, Charles W. – 1978
The reduction of existing lexical items to shorter forms has generally been discussed under the headings of "acronyms,""back-formations," and "clippings." Two kinds of acronym are found, the letter-naming type (e.g. FBI, YMCA) and the letter-sounding type (e.g. UNESCO, CARE). The latter type must be pronounceable within the phonotactic norms of…
Descriptors: Abbreviations, English, Generative Phonology, Language Patterns
Schenkat, Randy – 1980
This paper offers seven practical suggestions to teachers who are teaching phonics to hard-to-teach children (the learning disabled, the educable mentally retarded, slow learners, and the culturally disadvantaged) and who are not experiencing the success they desire. The suggestions are made under the following topics: (1) cumulative learning and…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Change Strategies, Classroom Techniques, Elementary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Foorman, Barbara R.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1991
Eighty children in first grade classes differing in the amount of letter-sound instruction daily were administered tests of phonemic segmentation, reading, and spelling three times during the year. No classroom differences in phonemic segmentation were found, but classrooms with more letter-sound instruction showed more spelling and reading…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Beginning Reading, Classroom Techniques, Elementary School Students
Paul, Rhea; Jennings, Patricia – 1991
Toddlers with slow expressive language development were compared on three global measures of phonological behavior to age-mates with normal speech development. The measures were the average level of complexity of syllable structures, the number of different consonant phonemes produced, and the percentage of consonants correctly produced in…
Descriptors: Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Consonants, Delayed Speech
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