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Peterson, Carole – Journal of Child Language, 1986
Analysis of the use of the connective "but" by 3- to 9-year-olds indicated that all most commonly used the word to signal semantic relationships and for pragmatic functions. Younger children most frequently used "but" when causal or precausal relationships existed, and older children used "but" more to encode complex contrast. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis
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Pak, Ty – Lingua, 1971
Descriptors: Connected Discourse, Descriptive Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, Linguistic Theory
Buschke, Herman; Schaier, Aron H. – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1979
A study used two-dimensional recall to identify the units of recall in the process of remembering, in order to investigate the correspondence of experimentally identified memory units to theoretically defined propositional units, and the correspondence of recall organization to story schema. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Connected Discourse, Experimental Psychology, Language Research
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Peterson, Carole; McCabe, Allyssa – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, 1991
Presents analyses of the use of the essential connectives "so,""because,""then," and "but" in narratives of children aged three to nine years. Connectives were used semantically, pragmatically, or, rarely, in error. Age changes were minimal. Structural complexity and elaboration improved throughout the…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Conjunctions, Connected Discourse
Gentner, Dedre – 1979
Twenty college students, ten each in the experimental and control groups, were the subjects of an experiment designed to demonstrate that integration of verb meanings occurs in connected discourse. Six paragraph-length stories, each of which included one or two critical sentences containing a general verb, were presented orally to the subjects.…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Associative Learning, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension
Ross, Robert N. – 1975
This paper discusses one way of exploring how we perceive and understand the connections between some parts of texts, or between one sentence and the whole discourse. Understanding ellipsis involves non-syntactic understanding; the semantic structure is responsible for our understanding of elliptical sentences and encoding the knowledge contained…
Descriptors: Connected Discourse, Deep Structure, Discourse Analysis, Grammar
Fahnestock, Jeanne – 1981
Helping students understand coherence in terms of the lexical ties and semantic relations possible between clauses and sentences formalizes an area of writing instruction that has been somewhat vague before and makes the process of creating a coherent paragraph less mysterious. Many students do not have the intuitive knowledge base for absorbing…
Descriptors: Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), College English, Connected Discourse
Schallert, Diane Lemonnier – 1975
This study attempted to elucidate the effects of context and level of processing on comprehension and memory for prose. Two aspects of memory for prose were investigated: the amount of information remembered and the semantic interpretation assigned to ambiguous paragraphs. Task instructions and exposure duration of the passages were manipulated to…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Cognitive Processes, Connected Discourse, Context Clues
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Seliger, Herbert W. – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, 1971
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Processes, Conceptual Schemes
Reichman, Rachel – 1978
To analyze the process involved in maintaining conversational coherency, the study described in this paper used a construct called a "context space" that grouped utterances referring to a single issue or episode. The paper defines the types of context spaces, parses individual conversations to identify the underlying model or structure,…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Connected Discourse, Context Clues, Discourse Analysis
Perfetti, Charles A.; Goldman, Susan R. – 1975
Thematization, the relative frequency of a discourse referent, and topicalization are conceptualized as related discourse functions. In a probe recall experiment, a word with a thematized referent was a better recall probe than a word with a nonthematized referent. Also, an agent noun was a better prompt than a recipient, and this semantic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Connected Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Language Research
Oller, John W., Jr. – 1975
Five orders of approximation to normal English prose were constructed; 5th, 10th, 25th, 50th, and 100th plus. Five cloze tests were then constructed by inserting blanks for deleted words in 5 word segments (5th order), 10 word segments (10th), 25 word segments (25th), 50 word segments (50th), and 100 word segments of five different passages of…
Descriptors: Cloze Procedure, Connected Discourse, Context Clues, Language Ability
Oh, Choon-Kyu – 1971
By offering solutions to long-standing problems like quantification, relativization, topicalization, and negation in Korean syntax, the present dissertation aims to show the limitations of any approach which concentrates on the sentence as a linguistic unit or which takes semantics to be interpretative. One possible solution suggested here is a…
Descriptors: Connected Discourse, Deep Structure, Doctoral Dissertations, Grammar
Hofmann, Thomas R. – 1979
The descriptive contents (cognitive meanings) of the modals "can,""may,""could,""might,""must,""need,""ought,""should," compared with paraphrastic verbs and adjectives, motivate two cross-classifying dimensions: logical modality (possibility, impossibility, necessity)…
Descriptors: Chinese, Connected Discourse, Contrastive Linguistics, Descriptive Linguistics
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Moe, Alden J. – 1978
Comprehension is a process that occurs within the reader and is at least partially dependent on cohesion and coherence. The concept of cohesion is used to show how sentences which are structurally independent of one another may be linked together. Cohesion exists within a text and is not the same as coherence, which is something the reader…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Coherence, Cohesion (Written Composition), Connected Discourse
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