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Cleave, Patricia L.; Rice, Mabel L. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1997
Production of the morpheme BE was studied among 22 children (ages 4-5) with and without specific language impairment (SLI). Contractible contexts were produced more accurately than uncontractible contexts by both groups, and there were no significant interactions between language status and contractibility. Copula forms were produced more…
Descriptors: Children, Comparative Analysis, Context Effect, Error Analysis (Language)

Carlisle, Joanne F. – Reading Psychology, 2003
Provides a review of current research on the relevance of morphological awareness to reading and reading instruction. Discusses children's development of awareness of the morphemic structure of words and the need for children to learn strategies that will help them read, spell, and understand morphologically complex words. Concludes that educators…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Objectives, Elementary Education, Literature Reviews

Farrar, Michael Jeffrey – Journal of Child Language, 1990
Examines the relationship between adult recasts of child utterances and the child's acquisition of syntactic structures. Results indicate that maternal recasts of specific morphemes were related to the acquisition of those specific morphemes during certain developmental periods, whereas other grammatical morphemes were facilitated by expansions…
Descriptors: Caregiver Speech, Correlation, Discourse Analysis, Infants

Kvaal, Joy T.; And Others – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 1988
Spontaneous language samples from 15 Mexican-American monolingual Spanish-speaking children between the ages of two and five were analyzed for the acquisition sequence of 10 morphemes: demonstratives, articles, copulas, and the regular present indicative; followed by irregular present indicative, regular preterite indicative, plurals, possessive…
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Ethnic Groups, Language Acquisition, Mexican Americans

Eddington, David – Hispania, 1995
Presents a psycholinguistic experiment focusing on whether common phonological alterations play a role in native speakers' perceptions of whether two words share a morpheme. Results indicate they are a significant factor in speakers' perceptions of morphemic relatedness. These findings show that phonological generalizations are psychologically…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Cognitive Processes, Foreign Countries, Morphemes

Libben, Gary – Language and Cognitive Processes, 1994
Two experiments investigated morphological decomposition in ambiguous novel compounds such as "busheater," which can be parsed as either "bus-heater" or "bush-heater." It was found that subjects' parsing choices for such words are influenced by orthographic constraints but that these constraints do not operate…
Descriptors: College Students, English, Foreign Countries, Language Processing

Leonard, Laurence B.; And Others – Language Acquisition, 1992
This investigation examined the possibility that features necessary for morphology, such as person and number, are absent from the underlying grammars of specifically language-impaired children. (46 references) (JL)
Descriptors: Children, Comparative Analysis, English, Grammar

Rice, Mabel L.; Wexler, Kenneth; Hershberger, Scott – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1998
A longitudinal study of 43 typical children (ages 2 to 8) and 21 children with specific language impairments (SLI) found that a diverse set of morphemes share the property of tense marking, that acquisition shows linear and nonlinear components, and that mean length of utterance predicts rate of acquisition. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Language Acquisition, Language Impairments

Assink, Egbert M. H.; Vooijs, Caroline; Knuijt, Paul P. N. A. – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2000
Compares morphological processing of skilled and less skilled Dutch readers. Focuses on the role of prefixes as access units in visual word recognition. Finds evidence for differential use of prefix information in undergraduate students and elementary school children. Concludes that the information accessed by prefixes is semantically combined…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Dutch, Elementary Education, Higher Education

Gross, Steven – International Journal of Bilingualism, 2000
Examines the structural consequences of the contact between Dutch overseers and Eastern slaves during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in the formation of Berbice Dutch, an unusual Creole because of its remarkably homogeneous substrate. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Code Switching (Language), Creoles, Diachronic Linguistics

Smith, Tina T.; Myers-Jennings, Corine; Coleman, Thalia – Communication Disorders Quarterly, 2000
A study examined the extent to which linguistic variation in the English language might have been affecting the performance of 160 rural preschoolers in South Carolina. When dialectal variations were not considered, the performance of the children differed from that of the normative populations on tests that assessed grammatical morphemes.…
Descriptors: Dialects, Grammar, Language Acquisition, Language Impairments

Miolo, Giuliana; Chapman, Robins S.; Sindberg, Heidi A. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
The authors evaluated the roles of auditory-verbal short-term memory, visual short-term memory, and group membership in predicting language comprehension, as measured by an experimental sentence comprehension task (SCT) and the Test for Auditory Comprehension of Language--Third Edition (TACL-3; E. Carrow-Woolfolk, 1999) in 38 participants: 19 with…
Descriptors: Down Syndrome, Syntax, Semantics, Morphemes
Goldschneider, Jennifer M.; DeKeyser, Robert M. – Language Learning, 2005
This meta-analysis pools data from 25 years of research on the order of acquisition of English grammatical morphemes by students of English as a second language (ESL). Some researchers have posited a "natural" order of acquisition common to all ESL learners, but no single cause has been shown for this phenomenon. Our study investigated…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, English (Second Language), Semantics, Grammar

Fletcher, Paul; Leonard, Laurence B.; Stokes, Stephanie F.; Wong, Anita M.-Y. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
Previous studies of verb morphology in children with specific language impairment (SLI) have been limited in the main to tense and agreement morphemes. Cantonese, which, like other Chinese languages, has no grammatical tense, presents an opportunity to investigate potential difficulties for children with SLI in other areas of verb morphology, via…
Descriptors: Verbs, Morphemes, Language Impairments, Sino Tibetan Languages
Idrissi, Ali; Kehayia, Eva – Brain and Language, 2004
An ongoing debate in Arabic morphology concerns the nature of the smallest unit governing lexical organization and representation in this language. A standard model maintains that Arabic words are typically analyzable into a three-consonantal root morpheme carrying the core meaning of words and a prosodic template responsible mostly for…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Semitic Languages, Dyslexia, Linguistic Theory