Results 201 to 210 of about 210,598 (300)
Abstract This study investigates internal linguistic variation in the instructional discourse of international teaching assistants (ITAs) by segmenting their mini‐lecture performances into four discourse types: introduction, lecture, conclusion, and audience interaction.
Heesun Chang, Hector Rivera
wiley +1 more source
JALEX: Japanese version of lexical decision database
Naoto Ota, Masaya Mochizuki
doaj +1 more source
Antecedent Frequency Effects on Anaphoric Pronoun Resolution: Evidence from Spanish [PDF]
Egusquiza, Nerea +2 more
core +1 more source
Cumulative Testing for Learning Spoken Vocabulary
Abstract Cumulative testing is known to improve vocabulary learning by integrating both new and previously introduced words in weekly quizzes. While evidence for its benefits is promising, prior research has primarily focused on the written mode of vocabulary, with target words studied, practiced, and tested in the visual mode only.
Ryo Maie, Takumi Uchihara
wiley +1 more source
A Country That Never Sleeps? A Web Scrapping Analysis of the 24‐h Economy Policy in Ghana
ABSTRACT In light of revitalizing Ghana's economic landscape through sustainable job creation underpinned by 24‐h operations across all key sectors, the National Democratic Congress proposed the ‘24‐h economy’ policy proposal. This study employs the web‐scraping technique through text mining and python codes to analyse 1820 comments from Facebook, X ...
Pius Gamette +3 more
wiley +1 more source
A longitudinal neuroimaging dataset on multisensory lexical processing in school-aged children. [PDF]
Lytle MN, McNorgan C, Booth JR.
europepmc +1 more source
Using language input and lexical processing to predict vocabulary size. [PDF]
Mahr T, Edwards J.
europepmc +1 more source
The Influence of Closeness Centrality on Lexical Processing. [PDF]
Goldstein R, Vitevitch MS.
europepmc +1 more source
The influence of foveal lexical processing load on parafoveal preview and saccadic targeting during Chinese reading. [PDF]
Zhang M +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Loanwords and Linguistic Phylogenetics: *pelek̑u‐ ‘axe’ and *(H)a(i̯)g̑‐ ‘goat’1
Abstract This paper assesses the role of borrowings in two different approaches to linguistic phylogenetics: Traditional qualitative analyses of lexemes, and quantitative computational analysis of cognacy. It problematises the assumption that loanwords can be excluded altogether from datasets of lexical cognacy.
Simon Poulsen
wiley +1 more source

