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Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
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Stewart, Jesse; Inlago, Lucia Gonza; Ayala, Gabriela Prado – Language Documentation & Conservation, 2023
On a 2022 fieldtrip to Ecuador, we encountered a large community of Media Lengua speakers in the province of Cotopaxi where the language was thought to be dormant. This is the same region where Pieter Muysken had first documented this 'mixed language' in the 1970s. However, subsequent fieldwork thereabout by several linguists had failed to turn up…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Language Skill Attrition, Geographic Regions, Language Research
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Clifton Pye – First Language, 2024
The Mayan language Mam uses complex predicates to express events. Complex predicates map multiple semantic elements onto a single word, and consequently have a blend of lexical and phrasal features. The chameleon-like nature of complex predicates provides a window on children's ability to express phrasal combinations at the one-word stage of…
Descriptors: Intonation, Suprasegmentals, American Indian Languages, Vowels
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Maria Kostromitina; Yongzhi Miao – Studies in Second Language Learning and Teaching, 2024
English has become an international language (EIL) as speakers around the world use it as a universal means of communication. Accordingly, scholars have investigated different aspects of EIL affecting communicative success. Speech scholars have been interested in speech constructs like accentedness, comprehensibility, and acceptability (e.g., Kang…
Descriptors: Pragmatics, Speech Acts, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Gabriela Pérez Báez; Kristen L. Morio; Alison L. Lapointe; Daryl Baldwin – Language Documentation & Conservation, 2023
The National Breath of Life Archival Institute for Indigenous Languages has provided training in archive-based linguistic research for revitalization since 2011 (Baldwin et al. 2018). Four two-week workshops held biennially through 2017 provided training in phonetics, phonology, morphology, and syntax; on accessing archival documentation; and on…
Descriptors: Archives, Documentation, Language Maintenance, Language Research
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Cenerini, Chantale; Junker, Marie-Odile; Rosen, Nicole – Language Documentation & Conservation, 2017
The Algonquian Linguistic Atlas (www.atlas-ling.ca) is an online multimedia linguistic atlas of Algonquian languages in Canada, built based on a template of conversational topics. It includes Algonquian languages primarily from the CreeInnu-Naskapi continuum, but also from Blackfoot, Mi'kmaw, and Ojibwe (including Algonquin), with other languages…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Canada Natives, Dialects, Phonology
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Mayer, Elisabeth; Sánchez, Liliana – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2019
Direct object clitics in Latin American Spanish are subject to great variability in features across dialects. Variability also characterizes bilingual acquisition and especially clitic doubling structures in language contact contexts. We focus on the distribution of clitics and Differential Object Marking (DOM) in clitic doubling structures among…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, American Indian Languages, Spanish, Second Language Learning
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Fitzgerald, Colleen M. – Language Documentation & Conservation, 2017
For language documentation to be sufficiently extensive to cover a given community's language practices (cf. Himmelmann 1998), then including verbal arts is essential to ensure the richness of that comprehensive record. The verbal arts span the creative and artistic uses of a given language by speakers, such as storytelling, songs, puns and…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Verbal Communication, Phonology, Language Usage
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Rice, Keren – Language Documentation & Conservation, 2014
In this paper I review the methodology that I used in beginning my early fieldwork on a tonal Athabaskan language, including preparation through reading and listening, working with speakers, organizing data, and describing and analyzing the data, stressing how these are not steps or stages, but intersect and interact with each other.
Descriptors: Tone Languages, American Indian Languages, Language Research, Research Methodology
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Gildersleeve-Neumann, Christina E.; Davis, Barbara L.; Macneilage, Peter F. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2013
To understand the interactions between production patterns common to children regardless of language environment and the early appearance of production effects based on perceptual learning from the ambient language requires the study of languages with diverse phonological properties. Few studies have evaluated early phonological acquisition…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Syllables, Vowels, Language Patterns
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Bird, Steven; Lee, Haejoong – Language Documentation & Conservation, 2014
Investigating a tone language involves careful transcription of tone on words and phrases. This is challenging when the phonological categories--the tones or melodies--have not been identified. Effects such as coarticulation, sandhi, and phrase-level prosody appear as obstacles to early elicitation and classification of tone. This article presents…
Descriptors: Classification, Computational Linguistics, Tone Languages, Intonation
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Zavala, Virginia – Linguistics and Education: An International Research Journal, 2011
In the Andes, a phonological transference known as "motoseo" has acquired ideological weight. People think that bilingual speakers of Quechua and Spanish "confuse" the vowels when speaking Spanish and that they are inferior to the ones who do not. In this article, I analyze the ideological agenda of the racialized verbal…
Descriptors: Bilingual Students, Speech Communication, Ideology, Rural Areas
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Rosen, Nicole – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2008
This paper discusses the language contact situation between Algonquian languages and French in Canada. Michif, a French-Plains Cree mixed language, is used as a case study for linguistic results of language contact. The paper describes the phonological, morphological, and syntactic conflict sites between the grammars of Plains Cree and French, as…
Descriptors: Linguistic Borrowing, Interference (Language), Speech Language Pathology, Foreign Countries
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Basham, Charlotte; Fathman, Ann – International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 2008
This paper focuses on how latent knowledge of an ancestral or heritage language affects subsequent acquisition by adults. The "latent speaker" is defined as an individual raised in an environment where the ancestral language was spoken but who did not become a speaker of that language. The study examines how attitudes, latent knowledge and…
Descriptors: Phonology, Adult Learning, Adult Students, Ukrainian
Miner, Kenneth L. – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1993
This paper is essentially a commentary on Steriade 1990, which deals with certain aspects of Winnebago phonology. The issues cluster around a much-discussed process known as Dorsey's Law (see Miner 1992 and references given there) that is operative in Mississippi Valley Siouan and that Steriade has generalized to other language groups. Winnebago…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Linguistic Theory, Phonology, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
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Courtney, Ellen H.; Saville-Troike, Muriel – Journal of Child Language, 2002
Navajo and Quechua, both languages with a highly complex morphology, provide intriguing insights into the acquisition of inflectional systems. The development of the verb in the two languages is especially interesting, since the morphology encodes diverse grammatical notions, with the complex verb often constituting the entire sentence. While the…
Descriptors: Semantics, American Indian Languages, Morphology (Languages), Verbs
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