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Hits 1 – 20 of 121
1
Intonation systems across varieties of English
Grice, Martine
;
German, James Sneed
;
Warren, Paul
In: The Oxford Handbook of Language Prosody ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03132888 ; The Oxford Handbook of Language Prosody, 2020, 9780198832232 (2020)
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2
Intonation systems across varieties of English
Grice, Martine
;
German, James Sneed
;
Warren, Paul
. - : University Press, 2020
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3
Using literal underpinnings to help learners remember figurative idioms: Does the connection need to be crystal-clear?
Wang, Xinqing
;
Boers, Frank
;
Warren, Paul
In: Education Publications (2020)
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4
Applying cognitive linguistics to second language idiom learning
Wang, Xinqing
. - : Victoria University of Wellington, 2020
Abstract:
Idioms are known to cause great difficulty for second language (L2) learners, who may understand the literal meanings of the constituent words of idioms like (be) waiting in the wings, but often fail to interpret the idiomatic, figurative meaning of the expression. Proponents of Cognitive Linguistics (CL) claim that CL provides a pathway to more systematic and insightful learning of figurative expressions like idioms. They advocate that learners should be informed of the literal underpinning of idiomatic expressions and their relationship to the figurative meaning. This is supported by the results of several experimental studies employing ‘etymological elaboration’. However, little is known about how learners actually experience the CL-style explanations, or about how the learning is affected by other factors such as learners’ perceived transparency of the connection between the literal underpinnings and the idiomatic meanings, and their L1. The research reported in this thesis therefore (1) investigates the effectiveness of etymological elaboration in facilitating idiom comprehension and retention; (2) examines the problems that L2 learners, i.e., native-Chinese EFL learners in this study, experience when they encounter English figurative idioms, and identifies the factors influencing success in learning the meanings of idioms. To achieve these objectives, a mixed methods design was employed. Etymological elaboration was implemented in a teaching experiment involving one-on-one interviews, in which 25 Chinese learners of English were presented with idioms whose meaning they were asked to guess first without and then with the aid of information about their literal underpinnings. After the correct figurative meaning was established, participants rated the transparency of the connection between the literal underpinning and the figurative meaning. One week later, the learners were presented with the same idioms and asked to recall their meaning. Follow-up interviews were also conducted to survey the learners’ experience with and awareness of idioms, and their general attitudes and strategies towards idiom learning. Participants’ responses and their recall of idiomatic meanings were scored by three raters. A combination of quantitative and qualitative analyses of the interview data investigated the learning process and the outcomes of the teaching experiment. The major findings are: (1) Etymological elaboration can facilitate the interpretation and meaning retention of L2 idioms to a substantial degree; and the L2 idiom learning involves the interplay of multiple factors, including the transparency of the idioms, L1 transfer and cross-cultural differences, learners’ prior L2 lexical knowledge, and their proficiency levels. (2) The degree of transparency of the literal-figurative connection influences meaning retention, especially for the low proficiency learners. However, the mnemonic effect is not confined to idioms that learners find most transparent, but also affects those that are “far-fetched”. (3) The accuracy of meaning inference during the learning phase has a significant impact on memory for the idioms; many errors can be traced back to wrong guesses made in the prior learning phase, and some relate to false equivalents and partial equivalents in the L1. This suggests that trial-and-error learning potentially induces wrong memory traces and that teaching practices should therefore promote more accurate comprehension from the start, in order to facilitate better long-term memory for idioms. (4) More exposure to and better awareness of idioms help EFL learners foster positive attitudes towards idiom learning, which may facilitate the integration and automatization of figurative multiword expressions like idioms in their bilingual mental lexicon, and in turn lead to higher L2 proficiency. The findings of this study have implications for second language teaching and learning. The innovative research design and advanced statistical analyses contribute to the development of language teaching research methodology.
Keyword:
cognitive linguistics
;
comprehension
;
etymological elaboration
;
idioms
;
literal underpinning
;
memory
;
second language learning
;
semantic transparency
URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/10063/9153
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5
Gesture, Prosody and Information Structure Synchronisation in Turkish
Turk, Olcay
. - : Victoria University of Wellington, 2020
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6
Prosodic and syntactic focus in speech processing in Mandarin Chinese
Yan, Mengzhu
. - : Victoria University of Wellington, 2020
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7
Tracking the New Zealand English NEAR/SQUARE merger using functional principal components analysis
Gubian, Michele
;
Harrington, Jonathan
;
Stevens, Mary
. - 2019
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8
The /el/-/æl/ merger in Australian English:Acoustic and articulatory insights
Diskin, Chloé
;
Loakes, Deborah
;
Billington, Rosey
. - : Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association Inc., 2019
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9
The Effects of Syllable and Utterance Position on Tongue Shape and Gestural Magnitude in /l/ and /r/
Leplatre, Gregory
;
Scobbie, James M.
;
Stuart-Smith, Jane
. - 2019
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10
The Effects of Syllable and Sentential Position on the Timing of Lingual Gestures in /l/ and /r/
Lawson, Eleanor
;
Stuart-Smith, Jane
. - 2019
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11
ISCAN: a System for Integrated Phonetic Analyses Across Speech Corpora
McAuliffe, Michael
;
Coles, Arlie
;
Goodale, Michael
. - : Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association Inc., 2019
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12
Large-scale Acoustic Analysis of Dialectal and Social Factors in English /s/-retraction
Stuart-Smith, Jane
;
Sonderegger, Morgan
;
Macdonald, Rachel
. - 2019
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13
Age Vectors vs. Axes of Intraspeaker Variation in Vowel Formants Measured Automatically From Several English Speech Corpora
Mielke, Jeff
;
Thomas, Erik R.
;
Fruehwald, Josef
. - 2019
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14
Structured Speaker Variability in Spontaneous Japanese Stop Contrast Production
Tanner, James
;
Sonderegger, Morgan
;
Stuart-Smith, Jane
. - 2019
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15
Identity, Socialization and Environment in Transgender Speakers: Sociophonetic Variation in Creak and /s/
Pearce, Jo
. - 2019
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16
Annotation of German Intonation: DIMA Compared with other Annotation Systems
Kügler, Frank
;
Baumann, Stefan
;
Andreeva, B.
. - : ASSTA, 2019
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17
Informativeness and speaking style affect the realization of nuclear and prenuclear accents in German
Baumann, Stefan
;
Mertens, Jane
;
Kalbertodt, Janina
. - : Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association Inc., 2019
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18
Modelling intonation: Beyond segments and tonal targets
Cangemi, Francesco
;
Albert, Aviad
;
Grice, Martine
. - : Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association Inc., 2019
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19
Tune-text negotiation: the effect of intonation on vowel duration
Grice, Martine
;
Savino, Michelina
;
Roettger, Timo
. - : Australasian Speech Science and Technology Association Inc., 2019
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20
Stress predictors in a Papuan Malay random forest
Himmelmann, Nikolaus P.
;
Kaland, Constantijn
;
Kluge, Angela
. - 2019
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