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Showing 1,246 to 1,260 of 1,821 results Save | Export
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Strauss, Steven L. – Glossa, 1980
Morpheme distribution is declared sufficiently independent of phonological considerations to warrant a theory of autonomous morphology. The "maximal nesting principle" proposed requires that each affix be attached to a new nonterminal node. This principle forces a new analysis of "-ate" derived verbs and eliminates the morphological abstractions…
Descriptors: Componential Analysis, Generative Phonology, Morphology (Languages), Morphophonemics
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Lebrun, Yvan – Language Sciences, 1979
Discusses the relationship between language and sexuality, between speech and love. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Language, Sex (Characteristics), Sexuality
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Catach, Nina – Langue Francaise, 1980
Analyzes the nature of punctuation, its functions (syntactic, suprasegmental, and semantic), its role in written language, and punctuation as grapheme. (AM)
Descriptors: Graphemes, Phonemes, Punctuation, Semantics
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Swerts, Marc; Hirschberg, Julia – Language and Speech, 1998
Introduces a special issue that includes papers which focus on the relationship between prosody and conversation. The papers represent different research traditions (e.g., the ethnomethodological framework of dialog analyses and report case studies, quantitative study of large corpora, experimental research using elicited or constructed speech…
Descriptors: Language Research, Morphology (Languages), Research Methodology, Speech Communication
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Cowie, Roddy; Douglas-Cowie, Ellen – Language and Speech, 1998
Examined recorded business telephone conversations, noting that at least some forms of spontaneous conversation contained a second form of global intonational marking. Certain attributes of intonation persisted throughout discourse units in the calls, differentiating one unit from another. Two types of parameters emerged (one controlling midpoint…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries, Intonation
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Carlson, Katy – Language and Speech, 2001
Explored the processing of ambiguous sentences that may be assigned a gapping or nongapping structure. Focuses on what factors affect the ultimate interpretive preferences for these sentences. In a questionnaire, sentences with greater parallelism between arguments received more gapping responses, though an overall bias toward the nongapping…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Language Processing, Questionnaires, Sentence Structure
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Arua, Arua E. – Indian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 1999
Discusses some of the segmental and suprasegmental features that give Swazi English a unique accent. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Language Variation, Phonemes
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Cubelli, Roberto; Beschin, Nicoletta – Brain and Language, 2005
Italian polysyllabic words with stress falling on the last syllable are written with a diacritic sign on the last vowel. It allows discrimination between two words with the same orthographic segments (e.g., papa [pope], papa [dad]). The effect of the accent mark in left neglect dyslexia has never been investigated. In the current study, six…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Word Recognition, Suprasegmentals, Syllables
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Curtin, S.; Mintz, T.H.; Christiansen, M.H. – Cognition, 2005
Over the past couple of decades, research has established that infants are sensitive to the predominant stress pattern of their native language. However, the degree to which the stress pattern shapes infants' language development has yet to be fully determined. Whether stress is merely a cue to help organize the patterns of speech or whether it is…
Descriptors: Infants, Cues, Syllables, Language Acquisition
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Kelly, Michael H. – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
Theories of English phonology regard syllable onset patterns as irrelevant to the assignment of lexical stress. This paper describes three studies that challenge this position. Study 1 tested whether stress patterns on a large sample of disyllabic English words varied as a function of word onset. The incidence of trochaic stress increased…
Descriptors: English, Suprasegmentals, Language Patterns, Syllables
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McCafferty, Steven G. – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching (IRAL), 2006
This study investigated the use of beat gestures (typically the sharp up-and-down movement of the hand) in conjunction with L2 speech production. The L2 participant, although in conversation with another person, synchronized his beats with the parsing of his words into syllables. Based on Gal' perin's formulation for the process of…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Syllables, Language Rhythm, English (Second Language)
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Weber, Rose-Marie – Journal of Research in Reading, 2006
This paper exposes how function words and their prosodic features play a part in learning and teaching to read in the early years. It sketches the place that function words have in the grammar of English and describes their phonological features, especially their weak stress and its role in the prosodic quality of sentences. It considers the ways…
Descriptors: Suprasegmentals, Sentences, Form Classes (Languages), Reading Fluency
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Weber, Andrea; Braun, Bettina; Crocker, Matthew W. – Language and Speech, 2006
In two eye-tracking experiments the role of contrastive pitch accents during the on-line determination of referents was examined. In both experiments, German listeners looked earlier at the picture of a referent belonging to a contrast pair ("red scissors," given "purple scissors") when instructions to click on it carried a…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Suprasegmentals, German, Form Classes (Languages)
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Halle, Morris – Slavic and East European Journal, 1975
This is a preliminary report of a study of Russian accentuation. The research attempted to show that Russian accentuation is based on a partition of all morphemes, both stems and suffixes, into those with and those without inherent stress. Simple rules then account for all stress patterns observed. (CHK)
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Morphemes, Morphology (Languages), Nouns
Nash, R. – Michigan Linguistic Society, 1969
In this paper the author examines two kinds of phonological interference observable in the speech of Puerto Rican bilinguals--phonemic and prosodic, and argues that because these two phonological subsystems are structured differently and have different signaling functions, each kind of interference must be treated independently with regard to its…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Interference (Language), Phonemes, Psycholinguistics
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