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Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word
World Literature Today, 1983John Hartley: Before Ongism: "To become what we want to be, we have to decide what we were" Orality & Literacy: The Technologization Of The Word Introduction Part 1: The orality of language 1. The literate mind and the oral past 2. Did you say 'oral literature'? Part 2: The modern discovery of primary oral cultures 1.
Robert Hauptman, Walter J. Ong
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Oral report of words and word approximations presented to the left or right visual field
Brain and Language, 1977Abstract Subjects reported letter strings forming words, pronounceable high approximations to words, and unpronounceable low approximations to words presented tachistoscopically to the left or right visual field (LVF, RVF). (a) For number of strings totally correct, the same RVF superiority was obtained with high approximations as with words, the ...
Seymour Axelrod +2 more
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Sacred Words: Orality, Literacy and Religion
2011Contains fulltext : 338695.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access)
Lardinois, A.P.M.H. +2 more
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Word of mouth: promoting oral health
Dental Nursing, 2008Oral health promotion is becoming an integral part of dentistry. Learning how to promote good oral health, educate and help patientsmaintain their oral health will help dental nurses in their role as registered health professionals. National Smile Month, organized by the British Dental Health Foundation (BDHF), is traditionally the biggest annual oral
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Word and Deed : The Acts of Peter and Orality
Apocrypha, 1992Christine Thomas s'interroge sur l'histoire de la composition des Actes de Pierre. Trois points de vue emergent de la recherche recente: a) des efforts visant a isoler des sources anterieures a la redaction des Actes apocryphes des apotres; b) un accent mis sur la libre creation romanesque dans la genese de ces ecrits; c) un recours aux theories de la ...
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Oral and Written Words. Are they the Same Units?
1999The purpose of this paper is to discuss the role of writing acquisition in the constitution of the “word” as a conceptual entity. Our hypothesis is that the pre-literate notion of “word” is dramatically changed through the acquisition of a writing system that uses empty spaces between strings of letters, giving by this procedure a new definition of ...
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Bee but not be: Oral reading of single words in aphasia and alexia
Neuropsychologia, 1975Abstract Three studies are reported of the oral reading ability of language-impaired patients. Part of speech and picturability are shown to contribute to a word's readability. In addition, words whose referents can be easily manipulated (operative nouns) prove easier to read than matched words whose referents are relatively figurative.
H, Gardner, E, Zurif
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Expanded norms for the controlled oral word association test
Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1997The Controlled Oral Word Association Test (COWAT) is a measure of a person's ability to make verbal associations to specified letters (i.e., C, F, and L). This measure is a useful component of a neuropsychological battery as it is able to detect changes in word association fluency often found with various disorders.
S W, Sumerall +4 more
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Oral Reading Skills of Children with Oral Language (Word-Finding) Difficulties
Reading Psychology, 2007We examined how children with and without oral language (word-finding) difficulties (WFD) perform on oral reading (OR) versus silent reading recognition (SRR) tasks when reading the same words and how lexical factors influenced OR accuracy, error patterns, and nature of miscues.
Diane J. German, Rochelle S. Newman
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Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word
Comparative Literature, 1984Elias L. Rivers, Walter J. Ong
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