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The Influence of Direct and Indirect Speech on Source Memory [PDF]

open access: yesCollabra: Psychology, 2018
People perceive the same situation described in direct speech (e.g., John said, “I like the food at this restaurant”) as more vivid and perceptually engaging than described in indirect speech (e.g., John said that he likes the food at the restaurant). So,
Anita Eerland, Rolf A. Zwaan
doaj   +7 more sources

How Quotation Types Shape Classic Novel Reading in Chinese: A Comparison Between Human Eye-Movements and Large Language Models [PDF]

open access: yesBehavioral Sciences
Quotations play a central role in shaping narrative perspective, as they guide readers’ adoption and shifting of character and narrator viewpoints. While direct speech (DS) is often assumed to enhance vividness and emotional engagement, its cognitive ...
Lijuan Chen, Wenjia Zuo, Xiaodong Xu
doaj   +2 more sources

Types of other people`s speech in The Book of Milutin by Danko Popović [PDF]

open access: yesZbornik Radova Filozofskog Fakulteta u Prištini, 2021
The subject of this paper are different types of speeches in the novel The Book of Milutin by Danko Popović. The paper provides description of different types of speeches and their modifications.
Dejanović Milica J.
doaj   +1 more source

Hz. Peygamber’in (s.a.v.) Üslubu ve Anlatım Tarzı

open access: yesİlahiyat Akademi, 2021
Edebî yönden eşsiz olan Kur’an-ı Kerîm’in mesajını insanlığa bildiren Hz. Peygamber (s.a.v.), Arap dilinin anlatım olanaklarından faydalanmış ve edebî bir üslup kullanmıştır. İfadelerinde fazlasıyla edebî tabirler bulunan Hz.
Recep Aslan
doaj   +1 more source

Quotation in Social Media: How Sharing Other People’s Words Could Increase Misinformation

open access: yesStudia Humanistyczne AGH, 2022
According to the report “We Are Social” (2021), one of the most important reasons why Internet users take to social media platforms are: “stay up-to-date with news and current events”, “seeing what’s being talked about”, and “sharing and discussing ...
Agnieszka Maria Kula, Monika Grzelka
doaj   +1 more source

Models of representing an astronomer’s voice in a journalist’s popular judgment [PDF]

open access: yesАктуальные проблемы филологии и педагогической лингвистики, 2021
Within the framework of this article, the starting point of the research is the theoretical position, according to which reports on discoveries and achievements in the field of astronomy appear as a frequency phenomenon, covered in specialized popular ...
Svetlana V. Bylkova
doaj   +1 more source

Free indirect speech as a means to introduce archaic style into the author’s narration: A Russian linguistics perspective [PDF]

open access: yesTraining, Language and Culture, 2018
The phenomenon of free indirect speech was intensively studied in the 20th century from two fundamentally different directions. Some scholars viewed it as a special syntactic or stylistic-syntactic structure in comparison with direct and reported speech.
Gayane Petrosyan
doaj   +1 more source

Mental Simulations of Phonological Representations Are Causally Linked to Silent Reading of Direct Versus Indirect Speech

open access: yesJournal of Cognition, 2021
Embodied theories propose that language is understood via mental simulations of sensory states related to perception and action. Given that direct speech (e.g., 'She says, “It’s a lovely day!”') is perceived to be more vivid than indirect speech (e.g ...
Bo Yao
doaj   +1 more source

Réflexions autour de la variation diamésique

open access: yesE-REA, 2022
This research aims to describe the representation of orality in fiction by analysing utterances of direct speech. The didactic approach adopted here highlights the concept of “diamesic variation” which is at work in the process of adapting an oral ...
Grégoire LACAZE
doaj   +1 more source

Silent reading of direct versus indirect speech activates voice-selective areas in the auditory cortex [PDF]

open access: yes, 2011
In human communication, direct speech (e.g., Mary said: “I'm hungry”) is perceived to be more vivid than indirect speech (e.g., Mary said [that] she was hungry). However, for silent reading, the representational consequences of this distinction are still
Belin, P., Scheepers, C., Yao, B.
core   +2 more sources

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