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Larkin, Rebecca F.; Snowling, Margaret J. – Reading & Writing Quarterly, 2008
Treiman and Cassar (1996) argued that young children are capable of assembling spellings from their constituent morphemes. The present study aims to replicate the methodology used by Treiman and colleagues to investigate whether young children in the UK are using morphological spelling strategies. Eighty-three children between five and nine years…
Descriptors: Spelling, Morphemes, Young Children, Foreign Countries
Roberts, Leah – Language Learning, 2008
Baggio presents the results of an event-related potential (ERP) study in which he examines the processing consequences of reading tense violations such as *"Afgelopen zondag lakt Vincent de kozijnen van zijn landhuis" (*"Last Sunday Vincent paints the window-frames of his country house"). The violation is arguably caused by a mismatch between the…
Descriptors: Sentences, Semantics, Form Classes (Languages), Morphemes
Vandergriff, Ilona; Barry, David; Mueller, Kimberly – Unterrichtspraxis/Teaching German, 2008
Our study of seven first-year college-level German textbooks surveys how these texts deal with the challenge of representing gender-inclusive language. Specifically, we look at gender marking in human nouns to see whether they occur as single-gender forms (e.g., "Student"), as morphological pairs in either full form (e.g., "Student/Studentin") or…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Nouns, German, Higher Education
Morris, Joanna; Grainger, Jonathan; Holcomb, Phillip J. – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2008
This experiment examined event-related responses to targets preceded by semantically transparent morphologically related primes (e.g., farmer-farm), semantically opaque primes with an apparent morphological relation (corner-corn), and orthographically, but not morphologically, related primes (scandal-scan) using the masked priming technique…
Descriptors: Semantics, Morphemes, Semiotics, Priming
Bandi-Rao, Shoba; Murphy, Gregory L. – Cognition, 2007
Although English verbs can be either regular ("walk"-"walked") or irregular ("sing"-"sang"), "denominal verbs" that are derived from nouns, such as the use of the verb "ring" derived from the noun "a ring", take the regular form even if they are homophonous with an existing irregular verb: "The soldiers ringed the city" rather than "The soldiers…
Descriptors: Semantics, Morphemes, Nouns, Verbs
Coll-Florit, Marta; Climent, Salvador; Castellon, Irene – Indian Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2007
The study of lexical aspect is one of the linguistic fields that has aroused most interest over the past 50 years. However, the psychological reality of the lexical aspect is a question that still remains unresolved. Empirical evidence is needed to account for the fact that speakers set cognitive differences among aspectual classes, as well as how…
Descriptors: Verbs, Morphemes, Spanish, Reading Processes
Nicoladis, Elena; Palmer, Andrea; Marentette, Paula – Developmental Science, 2007
Type and token frequency have been thought to be important in the acquisition of past tense morphology, particularly in differentiating regular and irregular forms. In this study we tested the role of frequency in two ways: (1) in bilingual children, who typically use and hear either language less often than monolingual children and (2)…
Descriptors: Verbs, Morphemes, Monolingualism, French
Jarmulowicz, Linda; Taran, Valentina L. – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2007
Purpose: This study examined whether lexical frequency, semantic knowledge, or sentence context affect children's production of primary stress in derived words with stress-changing suffixes (e.g., "-ity"). Method: Thirty children (M[subscript age] = 9;1 [years;months]) produced a limited set of high-frequency (HF) and low-frequency (LF) derived…
Descriptors: Semantics, Suffixes, Sentences, Language Processing
Nelson, Elena Margaret – ProQuest LLC, 2010
The focus of this dissertation is the highly specialized and stylized liturgical language of Russian Church Slavonic (RCS). Historically, RCS has been strictly controlled by authorities and has conformed to established norms, but innovations have nevertheless arisen in response to various conditions. One major wave of innovations was a long,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Slavic Languages, Languages for Special Purposes, Christianity
Moreno-Torres, Ignacio; Torres, Santiago; Santana, Rafael – Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2010
This is the first study to explore lexical and grammatical development in a deaf child diagnosed with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Inattentive sub-type (ADHDI). The child, whose family language was Spanish, was fitted with a cochlear implant (CI) when she was 18 months old. ADHDI, for which she was prescribed medication, was diagnosed…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Morphemes, Grammar, Standardized Tests
Al-Quran, Majed – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2010
Building up messages as a cognitive activity within the linguistic multi-level system is the result of the interaction between the various components of this system. Yet, this interactive process occurring in the language user's mind while encoding can vary from person to person. Likewise, it also differs in different recipients while decoding.…
Descriptors: Sentences, Sociolinguistics, Foreign Countries, Cognitive Processes
Szupica-Pyrzanowski, Malgorzata – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Failure to supply inflection is common in adult L2 learners of English and agrammatic aphasics (AAs), who are known to resort to bare verb forms. Among attempts to explain the absence of inflection are competing morphological and phonological explanations. In the L2 acquisition literature, omission of inflection is explained in terms of: mapping…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Phonology, Verbs, Morphemes
Todd, Peyton – Sign Language Studies, 2009
Vincent, a hearing child of deaf parents who was fluent in ASL by the time of his first exposure to a spoken language (English) at about age 3, needed only a few months to learn the distinction between English first person pronouns and pronouns referring to other grammatical persons, but it was several years before he learned all the other…
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Grammar, Oral Language, American Sign Language
Finestack, Lizbeth H.; Fey, Marc E. – American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2009
Purpose: To evaluate the learning effects of a deductive language-teaching procedure when teaching a novel gender agreement verb inflection to children with language impairment. Method: Thirty-two 6-8-year-old children with language impairment were randomly assigned to either a deductive (N = 16) or an inductive (N = 16) treatment group. In the…
Descriptors: Verbs, Morphemes, Grammar, Language Impairments
Velan, Hadas; Frost, Ram – Journal of Memory and Language, 2009
We examined the effects of letter-transposition in Hebrew in three masked-priming experiments. Hebrew, like English has an alphabetic orthography where sequential and contiguous letter strings represent phonemes. However, being a Semitic language it has a non-concatenated morphology that is based on root derivations. Experiment 1 showed that…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Phonemes, Morphemes, Inhibition