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Ye, Lijuan – TESL Canada Journal, 2014
Previous research within the field of argumentation has established that argumentation plays an important role in a variety of professions. Written argumentation has been extensively explored and investigated to examine its various aspects, including argument structures and schemes, argumentative strength, the role of audience, the evaluation of…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Language Styles, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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Huerta, Margarita; Lara-Alecio, Rafael; Tong, Fuhui; Irby, Beverly J. – International Journal of Science Education, 2014
We present the development and validation of a science notebook rubric intended to measure the academic language and conceptual understanding of non-mainstream students, specifically fifth-grade male and female economically disadvantaged Hispanic English language learner (ELL) and African-American or Hispanic native English-speaking students. The…
Descriptors: Scoring Rubrics, Science Instruction, Student Journals, Academic Discourse
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Siyanova-Chanturia, Anna; Conklin, Kathy; van Heuven, Walter J. B. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2011
Are speakers sensitive to the frequency with which phrases occur in language? The authors report an eye-tracking study that investigates this by examining the processing of multiword sequences that differ in phrasal frequency by native and proficient nonnative English speakers. Participants read sentences containing 3-word binomial phrases…
Descriptors: Word Frequency, Phrase Structure, English, Eye Movements
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Katsos, Napoleon; Bishop, Dorothy V. M. – Cognition, 2011
Recent investigations of the acquisition of scalar implicature report that young children do not reliably reject a sentence with a weak scalar term, e.g. "some of the books are red", when it is used as a description of a situation where a stronger statement is true, e.g. where all the books are red. This is taken as evidence that children do not…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Young Children, Native Speakers, English
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Chen, Jenn-Yeu; Su, Jui-Ju – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2011
Can a linguistic device of a language orient its speakers to a particular aspect of the world and result in increased sensitivity to that aspect? The question was examined with respect to the biological gender marker in English and the lack of it in Chinese. In Experiment 1, English and Chinese participants listened to stories and answered gender…
Descriptors: Sentences, Language Processing, English, Chinese
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Yuan, Boping; Dugarova, Esuna – Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2012
Although "wh"-words generally stay in situ in Chinese "wh"-questions, they can be topicalized. However, the "wh"-topicalization is determined at the syntax-discourse interface and has to be governed by discourse conditions; only discourse-linked (D-linked) "wh"-words can be topicalized, but non-D-linked ones cannot. This article reports on an…
Descriptors: Native Speakers, Nouns, Syntax, Second Language Learning
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Tempel, Marisa; ten Thije, Jan D. – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2012
This paper discusses the question of whether House's theory on a cultural filter can be applied to the study of the appreciation of multilingual audio tours. According to House theory, cultural and linguistic adjustments of a target text to a specific target culture will have a positive effect on the appreciation and understanding of the…
Descriptors: Native Speakers, Museums, Multilingualism, Translation
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Yilmaz, Yucel – Language Learning, 2012
This study investigated the effects of negative feedback type (i.e., explicit correction vs. recasts), communication mode (i.e., face-to-face communication vs. synchronous computer-mediated communication), and target structure salience (i.e., salient vs. nonsalient) on the acquisition of two Turkish morphemes. Forty-eight native speakers of…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Computer Mediated Communication, Synchronous Communication, Feedback (Response)
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Foucart, Alice; Frenck-Mestre, Cheryl – Journal of Memory and Language, 2012
We report a series of ERP and eye-tracking experiments investigating, (a) whether English-French learners can process grammatical gender online, (b) whether cross-linguistic similarities influence this ability, and (c) whether the syntactic distance between elements affects agreement processing. To address these questions we visually presented…
Descriptors: Evidence, Sentences, Nouns, Second Language Learning
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Kang, Seokhan – Journal of Pan-Pacific Association of Applied Linguistics, 2013
This study investigated the effect of language immersion in an English-speaking environment on the production of intonational features in L2 English sentences. It was hypothesized that the Korean group who had been immersed in the English language as children would have intonation patterns more similar to native English speakers than a nonimmersed…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Intonation, Korean, Native Speakers
Yakup, Mahire – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Some syllables are louder, longer and stronger than other syllables at the lexical level. These prominent prosodic characteristics of certain syllables are captured by suprasegmental features including fundamental frequency, duration and intensity. A language like English uses fundamental frequency, duration and intensity to distinguish stressed…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Stress Variables, Syllables, Phonology
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Linck, Jared A.; Schwieter, John W.; Sunderman, Gretchen – Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2012
This study investigated the role of domain-general inhibitory control in trilingual speech production. Taking an individual differences approach, we examined the relationship between performance on a non-linguistic measure of inhibitory control (the Simon task) and a multilingual language switching task for a group of fifty-six native English (L1)…
Descriptors: Evidence, Speech, Multilingualism, Inhibition
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Koening, Melissa; Woodward, Amanda – Journal of Child Language, 2012
The current study examined monolingual English-speaking toddlers' (N=50) ability to learn word-referent links from native speakers of Dutch versus English, and second, whether children generalized or sequestered their extensions when terms were tested by a subsequent speaker of English. Overall, children performed better in the English than in the…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Monolingualism, Vocabulary Development, Native Speakers
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Boroditsky, Lera; Fuhrman, Orly; McCormick, Kelly – Cognition, 2011
Time is a fundamental domain of experience. In this paper we ask whether aspects of language and culture affect how people think about this domain. Specifically, we consider whether English and Mandarin speakers think about time differently. We review all of the available evidence both for and against this hypothesis, and report new data that…
Descriptors: Language Patterns, Mandarin Chinese, English, Native Speakers
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Mueller, Jeansue; Jiang, Nan – Modern Language Journal, 2013
An experiment investigated adult language learners' ability to develop fully integrated cognitive representations of a difficult second language (L2) morphosyntactic feature: the Korean honorific verbal affix "(u)si." Native speaker (NS) and nonnative speaker (NNS) latencies during a word-by-word self-paced reading comprehension task…
Descriptors: Advanced Students, Second Language Learning, Korean, Morphology (Languages)
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