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Showing 46 to 60 of 378 results Save | Export
Kline, Charles R., Jr. – 1976
Rhetorical and linguistic concepts of the sentence are reviewed in the course of introducing the concept of the "minor sentence" (sentence fragments which may occur alone as complete linguistic utterances or which may be combined by parataxis or coordinators with a major sentence). Rather than restraining beginning writers from using…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Grammar, Higher Education, Language Usage
Marshall, Helaine W. – 1981
The writing of ESL students, while sophisticated in some respects, often contains fragments and run-ons. Because these students have no reliable, self-monitoring system for analyzing their writing and because they believe they are communicating effectively, they fail to recognize their difficulties in forming complete sentences. This paper…
Descriptors: Conjunctions, English (Second Language), Higher Education, Pronouns
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Rodman, Lilita – 1979
Maintaining that two kinds of ambiguity--ambiguous prepositional phrases and ambiguous modification of conjoined elements--account for a large number of ambiguous sentences in technical writing, this paper presents an algebraic analysis of each kind of ambiguity. It then suggests a number of ways in which each ambiguity may be unclear. By using…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Communication Skills, Editing, Grammar
Hairston, Maxine C. – 1977
Teaching students the traditional terminology for sentences is unnecessary and provides them little or no help in improving their writing. This paper outlines the most common difficulties in students' sentences and describes a simplified working vocabulary for teaching students how to solve their sentence problems. The paper shows the methods and…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, English Instruction, Grammar, Higher Education
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Sanders, Yancey M. – College Student Journal, 1975
The author describes a reading program based on James Dinnan's theory of how people learn. This unique program teaches both highly inefficient readers and those with milder developmental needs to deal effectively with practical and literary prose and with poetry. (Author)
Descriptors: Ability, Adults, Higher Education, Individual Development
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Newman, Jean E. – Discourse Processes, 1985
Describes three experiments that explored the informational roles of emphasis and word order in active sentences. The results, when considered together, strongly implicate recentness, but not emphasis, as an important means of linking temporally contiguous sentences. (HTH)
Descriptors: Coherence, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Language Processing
Kesselman-Turkel, Judi; Peterson, Franklynn – 2003
This grammar handbook emphasizes formal written usage, offering clues to help with comprehension. The seven sections discuss: (1) "Nouns" (e.g., most nouns can follow "the," and possessives can show more than possession); (2) "Pronouns" (e.g., pronouns come in small groups, and some pronouns defy logic); (3) "Verbs" (e.g., some plural subjects…
Descriptors: Conjunctions, Grammar, Higher Education, Nouns
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Penfield, Elizabeth F. – Exercise Exchange, 1978
Offers a method of substituting new words for the words in a well-known phrase to demonstrate the power of syntax. (TJ)
Descriptors: English Instruction, Higher Education, Secondary Education, Sentence Structure
Strange, Dorothy Flanders; Kebbel, Gary W. – Community College Journalist, 1979
Points out that writing errors of journalism students can result from faulty thought patterns involving thinking in sentence fragments, personifying objects, using bureaucratic abstractions, and condensing complex ideas; examines ways of dealing with bureaucratic coding and compressed sentences. (Conclusion of a two-part article.) (GT)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Communication Problems, Higher Education, Journalism Education
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Crewe, W. J. – ELT Journal, 1990
Examines the effect of the misuse and over-use of logical connectives in English-as-a-Second-Language undergraduate writing, and suggests that students use a small subset of relatively comprehensible connectives, employ connectives for phrasal expansion, and view logical progression as an integral stage in writing. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English (Second Language), Higher Education, Second Language Instruction
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Bates, Elizabeth; Devescovi, Antonella; D'Amico, Simona – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1999
Examined the extent to which cross-linguistic differences in sentence interpretation would generalize to complex sentences with an embedded clause. College students who were native speakers of English or Italian completed four experiments. Results indicated that cross-linguistic differences were maintained when students interpreted complex…
Descriptors: College Students, Contrastive Linguistics, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Whitman, Richard F.; Timmis, John H. – Human Communication Research, 1975
Examines the influence of oral message organization on fact recall, patterning and problem-solving. (MH)
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Higher Education, Language Usage, Learning Processes
Morenberg, Max – 1981
When the literature and the research results on sentence combining are analyzed, they seem to provide an expanded meaning of sentence combining and reasons for its effects on the writing of some students. Gains in syntactic maturity alone do not explain why sentence combining affects positively the writing of some students, nor does the fact that…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Paragraph Composition, Sentence Combining, Sentence Structure
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
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Grober, Ellen H.; And Others – Cognition, 1978
Subjects completed sentences of the form NP1 aux V NP2 because (but) Pro...(e.g., John may scold Bill because he...) with a reason or motive for the action described. A basic perceptual strategy was hypothesized to underlie the comprehension of these sentences which have a potentially ambiguous pronoun in the subject position of the subordinate…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Context Clues, Deep Structure, Higher Education
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