Results 201 to 210 of about 33,172 (249)
Multi-level language deficits in behavioural frontotemporal degeneration and related disorders. [PDF]
Denève A +10 more
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Derivational Morphology Performance of Children Who Are Deaf and Hard of Hearing Who Use Cochlear Implants or Hearing Aids. [PDF]
Lund E, Johnson B, Werfel KL.
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A Case Study of Suspected Childhood Apraxia of Sign. [PDF]
Jackson C, Hagstrom L, Emmorey K.
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Phonology of a Soundless Language: Phonological Structure of the American Sign Language
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Phonological processes and sign language development
First Language, 1990Over the last ten years or so there has been a steady increase in studies of sign language development in deaf children: the majority of these being concerned with the development of American Sign Language (ASL; see Newport and Meier, 1985; Meier and Newport, 1990, for useful reviews).
John Clibbens, Margaret Harris
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American Sign Language: The Phonological Base
Sign Language Studies, 1989This paper has the ambitious goal of outlining the phonological structures and processes we have analyzed in American Sign Language (ASL). In order to do this we have divided the paper into five parts. In section 1 we detail the types of sequential phenomena found in the production of individual signs, allowing us to argue that ASL signs are ...
Scott K. Liddell, Robert E. Johnson
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Phonological parameters in Croatian Sign Language
Sign Language & Linguistics, 2006We present an initial description of the sign parameters in Croatian Sign Language. We show that HZJ has a comparable phonological structure to other known sign languages, including basic sign parts, such as location, handshape, movement, orientation, and nonmanual characteristics.
Šarac Kuhn, Ninoslava +2 more
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Phonological similarity in American Sign Language
Language and Cognitive Processes, 2002The studies reported here investigate deaf and hearing subjects' ratings of American Sign Language (ASL) signs to assess whether linguistic experience shapes judgements of sign similarity. Sign language stimuli were constructed in such a way as to vary the formational similarity of the signs along well-accepted 'phonological' parameters.
Ursula Hildebrandt, David Corina
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