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Al-Jarf, Reima – Online Submission, 2019
36 Saudi EFL freshmen students, at the College of Languages and Translation, took a listening-spelling test in which they filled out 100 blanks in a dialogue. Results indicated that 63% of the spelling errors were phonemic and 37% were graphemic. It was also found that the subjects had more problems with whole words than problems with graphemes…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, English (Second Language), Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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Lawson, Alistair; Attridge, Ann; Lapok, Paul – Research-publishing.net, 2014
Many students of English language find pronunciation difficult to master. This work in progress paper discusses an incremental and iterative approach towards developing requirements for software applications to assist learners with the perception and production of English pronunciation in terms of phonemes and prosody. It was found that prompts…
Descriptors: Intonation, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Pronunciation
Lindamood, Charles; And Others – 1972
The Lindamood Auditory Conceptualization (LAC) Test was constructed with the recognition that the process of decoding involves an integration of the auditory, visual, and motor senses. Requiring the manipulation of colored blocks to indicate conceptualization of test patterns spoken by the examiner, subtest 1 entails coding of identity, number,…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Intermediate Grades, Kindergarten, Literacy Education
Edwards, Jan; Beckman, Mary – 1987
A series of phonetic production and perception experiments were designed to describe the phonological or phonetic domains of two effects in spoken English: final lengthening, generally interpreted as a mark for the edge of some linguistically-defined unit of speech production, and stress-timed shortening, generally interpreted as evidence for…
Descriptors: English, Intonation, Language Patterns, Language Usage
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Rochet, B. – 1973
It is generally agreed among French linguists that the word has no phonetic or phonological status in French. This position reflects mostly pedagogical considerations and preoccupation with surface phonetic facts and demarcative signals. Investigation of processes of a more abstract nature reveals, however, that a certain number of rules…
Descriptors: French, Linguistic Theory, Phonemes, Phonemics
Bagshaw, Paul C.; Williams, Briony J. – 1992
A study reports a set of labelling criteria which have been developed to label prosodic events in clear, continuous speech, and proposes a scheme whereby this information can be transcribed in a machine readable format. A prosody in a syllabic domain which is synchronized with a phonemic segmentation was annotated. A procedural definition of…
Descriptors: Acoustic Phonetics, Foreign Countries, Phonemes, Speech Communication
Liberman, Isabelle Y. – Bulletin of The Orton Society, 1973
The purpose of this study was to determine how well children can identify the number of phonemic segments in spoken words and how this compares with their ability to deal similarly with syllables. The subjects were 46 preschoolers, 49 kindergarteners, and 40 first graders. Alphabetized class registers were used at each grade level to divide the…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Kindergarten Children, Perceptual Development, Phonemes
Howard, Marilyn – 1979
A teaching technique that leads to auditory conceptualization--the ability to determine the number and order of sounds embedded within syllables--shows promise of measurably improving the reading proficiency of children of all ability levels. Based on C. and P. Lindamood's published technique, "Auditory Discrimination in Depth," the…
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Auditory Training, Discovery Learning, Kinesthetic Methods
Vogel, Irene; Nespor, Marina – 1978
Traditional descriptions of Italian phonology have occasionally suggested that some type of connection exists between "raddoppiamento sintattico" (RS) and the word internal consonant length contrast. (RS is defined as a systematic lengthening of the first consonant of the second word in a two-word sequence in certain syntactic and phonological…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Consonants, Descriptive Linguistics, Italian
Dickerson, Wayne B. – 1974
This paper attempts a systematic approach to the teaching of word stress in the ESL classroom. Stress assignment rules from Chomsky and Halle and from Ross are used to establish the SISL Principle (Stress Initial Strong Left), for final weak-syllable words. On the basis of spelling, this rule can be applied correctly to 95 out of 100 cases. (AM)
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Articulation (Speech), Consonants, English (Second Language)
Kamii, Constance; And Others – 1987
A study examined the phoneme-grapheme correspondence in native English-speaking kindergartners' spelling and compared it to the results of similar research with Spanish-speaking children. It tested the hypothesis that English-speaking children make their first grapheme-sound correspondences differently because of phonological differences in the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, English, Error Patterns, Kindergarten
Moon, Gui-Sun – 1987
A discussion of the nasal harmony of Aguaruna, a language of the Jivaroan family in South America, approaches the subject from the viewpoint of generative phonology. This theory of phonology proposes an underlying nasal consonant, later deleted, that accounts for vowel nasalization. Complex rules that suppose a complex system of vowel and…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Diachronic Linguistics, Distinctive Features (Language), Generative Phonology
Kreidler, Charles W. – 1978
The reduction of existing lexical items to shorter forms has generally been discussed under the headings of "acronyms,""back-formations," and "clippings." Two kinds of acronym are found, the letter-naming type (e.g. FBI, YMCA) and the letter-sounding type (e.g. UNESCO, CARE). The latter type must be pronounceable within the phonotactic norms of…
Descriptors: Abbreviations, English, Generative Phonology, Language Patterns
Paul, Rhea; Jennings, Patricia – 1991
Toddlers with slow expressive language development were compared on three global measures of phonological behavior to age-mates with normal speech development. The measures were the average level of complexity of syllable structures, the number of different consonant phonemes produced, and the percentage of consonants correctly produced in…
Descriptors: Child Language, Comparative Analysis, Consonants, Delayed Speech
Grundt, Alice Wyland – 1975
This paper argues that the origin of the tonal accents in Low German, Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian can be explained on the basis of segmental circumstances, that they may be considered as secondary in the historical development of these languages, and that they arise when the redundant tonal transition in centering diphthongs becomes distinctive…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Componential Analysis, Consonants, Diachronic Linguistics
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