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sj-ipynb-3-ltr-10.1177_13621688211020412 for Finding the sweet spot: Learners’ productive knowledge of mid-frequency lexical items ...
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Finding the sweet spot: Learners’ productive knowledge of mid-frequency lexical items ...
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sj-ipynb-3-ltr-10.1177_13621688211020412 for Finding the sweet spot: Learners’ productive knowledge of mid-frequency lexical items ...
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Finding the sweet spot: Learners’ productive knowledge of mid-frequency lexical items ...
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sj-csv-2-ltr-10.1177_13621688211020412 for Finding the sweet spot: Learners’ productive knowledge of mid-frequency lexical items ...
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sj-csv-1-ltr-10.1177_13621688211020412 for Finding the sweet spot: Learners’ productive knowledge of mid-frequency lexical items ...
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sj-csv-2-ltr-10.1177_13621688211020412 for Finding the sweet spot: Learners’ productive knowledge of mid-frequency lexical items ...
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sj-csv-1-ltr-10.1177_13621688211020412 for Finding the sweet spot: Learners’ productive knowledge of mid-frequency lexical items ...
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Finding the sweet spot: Learners’ productive knowledge of mid-frequency lexical items
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Multiword sequences in L2 English language learners’ speech: The relationship between trigrams and lexical variety across development.
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The University of Pittsburgh English Language Institute Corpus (PELIC) ...
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Identifying Co-reference of Zibun and Caki: The Case of Reflexives in Japanese and Korean
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Abstract:
This study examines the properties of co-reference in DPs and the Japanese reflexive zibun, and the Korean reflexive caki. We posit that the resolution of local and long distance binding ambiguity in Japanese and Korean is influenced by the case particles that mark the reflexives. Results from a truth-value judgment task showed that Japanese and Koreans not only have different binding patterns but local and long distance binding varies based on case-marked reflexives. Bonferroni post-hoc tests revealed that Japanese prefer local binding when zibun is marked by the nominative case and long distance binding for the dative and accusative cases, while the Koreans prefer long distance binding when caki is marked by the genitive, dative, and accusative cases. Overall, our results show that further studies of reflexives should closely examine the role of case markers in ambiguity resolution and also examine how native speakers parse and process ambiguous sentences.
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Keyword:
Binding theory; caki; case; reflexivity; zibun
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1811/86764
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Accurate Measurement of Lexical Sophistication in ESL with Reference to Learner Data
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What kind of priming is most effective in the processing of relative clauses in context?
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In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 1 (2016): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 37:1–15 ; 2473-8689 (2016)
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The Influence of Moraic Structure on L2 English Syllable-Final Consonants
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In: Proceedings of the Annual Meetings on Phonology; Proceedings of the 2014 Annual Meeting on Phonology ; 2377-3324 (2016)
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