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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
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Gardner, Rod; Mushin, Ilana – Australian Review of Applied Linguistics, 2007
Overlap in conversation is a well-established area of conversation analysis research (e.g. Jefferson 1983; Schegloff 2000) which can reveal how participants orient to transition relevance places. This paper presents an analysis of overlap in the mixed (Garrwa, Kriol and English) language conversations of two indigenous Australian women as part of…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Females, Indigenous Populations, Dialogs (Language)
Chun, Dorothy M. – 1987
A study investigated the intonational patterns used by women and men at the ends of utterances for the purpose of managing discourse. The research sought to describe how intonation helps to signal that a speaker is through speaking and desires a response or reaction from the listener, or that the speaker is not through with a turn and wishes to…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, German, Intonation, Paralinguistics
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Poyatos, Fernando – Language Sciences, 1982
Examines the various aspects of natural conversation in order to provide a theoretically comprehensive schema that accounts for a conversation's structure. Aspects considered are: (1) speaker-listener initial and turn-change behavior; (2) the listener's speaker-directed behavior; (3) interlistener and simultaneous behaviors; and (4) the function…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Language Patterns, Language Research, Paralinguistics
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Wagner, Klaus R. – Journal of Child Language, 1985
Describe studies in which day-long recordings were made of nine-year-old children's spontaneous speech. Results indicate that: (1) children aged five to 15 speak some 20,000 words of discourse per day in about two to three hours of pure speaking time; (2) they have an active vocabulary of some 3,000 word-form types. (SED)
Descriptors: Audiotape Recordings, Child Language, Discourse Analysis, Language Research
Howe, Mary – 1991
Conversations are cooperatively achieved speech events. In introducing a new topic, there are specific procedures followed to close the old topic. Because these procedures take place over a series of utterances, both/all participants must cooperate to close a topic. Analysis of conversations among adults who know each other suggests that there are…
Descriptors: Adults, Cooperation, Discourse Analysis, Interpersonal Communication
Andrews, Barry J. – IRAL, 1989
A study examines the way in which one group of discourse connectors, terminators, function in contemporary spoken French. Three types of terminators, elements used at the end of an utterance or section to indicate its completion, are investigated, including utterance terminators, interrogative tags, and terminal tags. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Discourse Analysis, French, Language Patterns
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Cutler, Anne; Scott, Donia R. – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1990
Investigates whether listener bias contributes to the mistaken notion that women talk more than men. Perceptual effects (misjudgments of rates of speech) and attitudes to social roles and perception of power relations are suggested to be among the factors contributing to the misjudgment. (GLR)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Dialogs (Language), Discourse Analysis, Females
Hess-Luttich, Ernest W. B. – Deutsche Sprache, 1974
The linguistic behavior of a given individual varies; he will on different occasions speak (or write) differently according to what may be roughly described as different social situations: he will use a number of different registers. The application of such registers both in the field of text analysis and in the preparation of teaching materials…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Language Styles, Language Usage, Language Variation
Casken, Sarah T. – 1980
Based on a model developed by Brown and Levinson (1978), this thesis examines one feature underlying appropriate language use--politeness--as it affects the discourse of native English speakers in three situations. The three situations and speakers involved are: (1) British speakers in a British public library, (2) American speakers in an American…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Discourse Analysis, English, Language Research
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Bolozky, Shmuel – Journal of Linguistics, 1977
This paper deals with the tempo aspect of fast speech and the theoretical implications of increase in rate of speech. Constraints unique to fast speech and normal speech are discussed. Reductions and assimilations in fast speech are noted, and points are illustrated with examples from Hebrew. (CHK)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Discourse Analysis, Generative Phonology, Hebrew
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O'Connell, Daniel C.; Kowal, Sabine – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2004
Erard's (2004) publication in the "New York Times" of a journalistic history of the filled pause serves as the occasion for this critical review of the past half-century of research on the filled pause. Historically, the various phonetic realizations or instantiations of the filled pause have been presented with an odd recurrent admixture of the…
Descriptors: Written Language, Discourse Analysis, Oral Language, Psycholinguistics
Gaies, Stephen J. – 1981
The study investigates whether input and interaction features which previous research has identified as characteristic of native speaker (NS) - nonnative speaker (NNS) speech (features which occur more frequently in NS-NNS speech than in speech between NSs) will occur with equal frequency in NS-NNS speech settings in which the NNSs have…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Language Research, Native Speakers, Non English Speaking
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Holmes, Janet – Language in Society, 1986
Describes a range of forms and functions expressed by "you know," as well as its use by women and men in a corpus of spontaneous speech. Interesting contrasts were found in the most frequent functions expressed by "you know" in female and male usage. (Author/SED)
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Females, Function Words, Intonation
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Tree, Jean E. Fox; Clark, Herbert H. – Cognition, 1997
Examined large corpus of spontaneous English conversation for pronunciation of "the" and speech patterns immediately following. Found that speakers use "thiy" (versus "thuh") pronunciation to signal immediate suspension of speech to deal with a problem in production; problems were at many levels of production, including articulation, word…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Determiners (Languages), Discourse Analysis, Function Words
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Danaher, David S. – Slavic and East European Journal, 1996
Introduces alternative approach to a controversial issue in Czech linguistics--the semantics of verbs of the type "rikavat,""delavat," and so on. The article demonstrates that these verbs can be called habitual verbs in the Peircean sense of the term "habit," and the key to the semantics of these verbs is recognizing…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Czech, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries
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