Results 191 to 200 of about 1,134 (298)
A Guide to Build (ING) GLMM Trees in Canadian Maritime English: Part 2, Linguistic Factors
ABSTRACT This second paper in a two‐part methodological guide demonstrates how Generalised Linear Mixed Model (GLMM) tree analysis can be used to explore linguistic conditioning in sociolinguistic variation. Building on Part 1, which introduced the dataset and illustrated how GLMM trees reveal social patterning in (ING) variation, Part 2 focuses on the
Matt Hunt Gardner
wiley +1 more source
The influence of visual attention on letter recognition and reading acquisition in Arabic. [PDF]
Ghandour A +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract This duoethnographic study explores how two nonnative returnee English teachers in China negotiate their professional identities through chronotopically layered transnational literacy experiences. Drawing on the concept of the chronotope—the interconnectedness of time, space, and personhood—the analysis identifies three chronotopic ...
Shan Chen, Luping Sun
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Our research investigated how L2 and L1 reading, L1 low‐level skills and working memory are related to ratings and the linguistic characteristics (productivity, cohesion, lexical sophistication and diversity, syntactic complexity, and accuracy) of argumentative and narrative texts. The research was conducted in Hungary with 95 secondary school
Judit Kormos, Csilla Bartha
wiley +1 more source
Negotiating language in family texts: case-study of transnational families in Finland. [PDF]
Bloch G.
europepmc +1 more source
The Americanization of Nigerian English spelling and punctuation
Abstract Spelling is the most standardized level of language, and prescriptive spelling norms in former British colonies often advocate adherence to British spelling norms which differs from the local linguistic reality. Hence, recent research on the evolution of postcolonial Englishes and the Americanization of Englishes worldwide has questioned the ...
Temitayo Olatoye
wiley +1 more source
Beyond the left cerebral hemisphere: bilateral language lateralization in healthy aging and its clinical implications. [PDF]
Toloza-Ramirez D +7 more
europepmc +1 more source
Attitudes to Nigerian Englishes in higher education
Abstract Although there is a bourgeoning of studies on attitudes towards Nigerian Englishes, there is limited research on the effects of participants’ discipline (STEM and non‐STEM) and the type of secondary school (private and government) they attended in evaluating Nigerian Englishes.
Sopuruchi Christian Aboh
wiley +1 more source

