Results 191 to 200 of about 22,975 (241)
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Phonological process occurrence in phonologically disordered children
Applied Psycholinguistics, 1983ABSTRACTRecent research in phonological disorders has focused on phonological processes, to determine the number of children using particular processes. This study investigated individual patterns of phonological process occurrence in nine phonologically disordered children.
Carla Dunn, Barbara L. Davis
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Phonological Processes and Other Routes
Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1989L'auteur propose une reflexion sur l'utilisation de la mesure des processus phonologiques pour predire les difficultes d'apprentissage. On montre en particulier que le recours a ces mesures et l'abandon du Q.I.
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Phonological processing in Broca's aphasics
Brain and Language, 1980Abstract Phonological processing was investigated in nine Broca's aphasics. A receptive phonological task examined knowledge of phonotactic rules. Three lists of “word” pairs, phoneme sequences, were constructed such that one member was possible in English and the other was not. The lists varied in distance from English or phonemic structure (CCVC vs.
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Phonological harmony as a processing problem
Journal of Child Language, 1992ABSTRACTThis investigation focuses upon an outstanding aspect of child phonology – that of consonant harmony, relabelled ‘phonological harmony’ – and inquires whether representational or processing deficits are responsible for its occurrence. A detailed analysis of the oral output of one German-speaking girl (2;7.15–2;11) supports the contention that ...
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2002
Processing is a very general term. Preceded by phonological its domain of reference can be located by presumption in the realm of language (if only because the phonological processing of food, or of passport applications, seems rather improbable).
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Processing is a very general term. Preceded by phonological its domain of reference can be located by presumption in the realm of language (if only because the phonological processing of food, or of passport applications, seems rather improbable).
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Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 1975
In response to the editorial note published recently in JIPA (Wells 1974), we wish to indicate one of the several problems involved in establishing the terminology of diachronic (and morphophonemic) processes. There are evidently three different variables that could be used for classifying (and hence naming) the conditioned sound changes: (1) the ...
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In response to the editorial note published recently in JIPA (Wells 1974), we wish to indicate one of the several problems involved in establishing the terminology of diachronic (and morphophonemic) processes. There are evidently three different variables that could be used for classifying (and hence naming) the conditioned sound changes: (1) the ...
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Phonological Approaches and Processes
2007AbstractThis chapter offers a categorization of sound-changes: splits, mergers, and shifts; combinations of these three categories; and realization and phonotactic developments with the potential for phonological ‘activation’. All of these developments are exemplified and discussed, and it is concluded that sound-change is an ‘emergent’, processual ...
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