Results 291 to 300 of about 1,854,671 (376)
Evaluation of phonological awareness training on reading improvement and skills
Mohsen Saeidmanesh+2 more
openalex +1 more source
Places as refrains: A non‐constructive alternative to assemblage thinking
Abstract Over the past 20 to 30 years, relational, post‐humanist, processual, and non‐representational approaches to space and place have gained an increasing purchase within anglophone human geography, whether underpinned by academic engagements with Western philosophy, anthropology, or indigenous thinking and praxis.
Peter Merriman
wiley +1 more source
The Relationship Between Speech, Language, and Phonological Awareness in Preschool-Age Children With Developmental Disabilities. [PDF]
Barton-Hulsey A, Sevcik RA, Romski M.
europepmc +1 more source
Profile of phonological awareness in bilingual and monolingual children.
Lourdes Bernadete Rocha de Souza+1 more
openalex
A corpus‐based analysis of adjective amplification in Hong Kong, Indian and Philippine English
Abstract This study considers a corpus‐based approach for analysing adjective amplifier systems (very, really, so, etc.) in Hong Kong English (HKE), Indian Englsih (IndE) and Philippine English (PhiE) based on data from the International Corpus of English. The current study adds to existing research by providing insights into the understudied adjective
Martin Schweinberger
wiley +1 more source
Stigma, self‐styling and ‘forced accents’ among English L2 speakers in Spain
Abstract This paper examines the relationship between shame, stigma and accent for non‐native English speakers in Spain. The low English competence of the Spanish population frequently constitutes a source of individual and collective stigma – which includes the apparent undesirability of Spanish‐sounding English.
Eva Codó, Carly Collins
wiley +1 more source
Nigerian English research: Developments and directions
Abstract This article describes the progress made by scholars over a period of more than five decades in the field of Nigerian English studies. It will thus serve as a useful tool for those researching in this field; and apparently there has been no such attempt to date to review the research landscape of Nigerian English in order to show its key ...
David Jowitt, Kingsley O. Ugwuanyi
wiley +1 more source