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So, Wing Chee; Demir, Ozlem Ece; Goldin-Meadow, Susan – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2010
Young children produce gestures to disambiguate arguments. This study explores whether the gestures they produce are constrained by discourse-pragmatic principles: person and information status. We ask whether children use gesture more often to indicate the referents that have to be specified (i.e., third person and new referents) than the…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Nouns, Child Language, Young Children
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Kempt, Donna; Maxwell, Madeline M. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1989
Analysis of hearing-impaired adolescents' signed and written sentences expressing simple locative state relations found noun reversal and pragmatic focus errors in 7 percent of signed and 15 percent of written responses. Most errors were produced by profoundly hearing-impaired signers attending public day school. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Adolescents, American Sign Language, Error Analysis (Language), Hearing Impairments
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Hassan, Taman A. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1993
The role of four cues in the assignment of actor role in Arabic was studied. Fifty-four sentences representing all possible permutations of the cues were presented to 100 native speakers of Arabic who were asked to identify the actor in each sentence. (Contains 41 references.) (JL)
Descriptors: Arabic, Case (Grammar), College Students, Cues