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Research on emotions in second language acquisition: reflections on its birth and unexpected growth
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Foreign language peace of mind: a positive emotion drawn from the Chinese EFL learning context
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Do well-being and resilience predict the foreign language teaching enjoyment of teachers of Italian?
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The development of a short-form foreign language enjoyment scale
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Learner emotions, autonomy and trait emotional intelligence in ‘in-person’ versus emergency remote English foreign language teaching in Europe
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Does the Complementarity Principle apply to inner speech? A mixed-methods study on multilingual Chinese university students in the UK
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How Saudi migrants’ metapragmatic judgments of Arabic L1 nonverbal greetings change after prolonged exposure to English
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A crosslinguistic study of the perception of emotional intonation. Influence of the pitch modulations
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Abstract:
Pitch perception plays a more important role in emotional communication in English than in Korean. Interpreting the semantic aspects of pitch levels therefore presents a challenge for Korean learners of English. This study investigated how 49 Korean learners of English perceived 20 English emotional utterances. Participants were asked to complete a congruency task in which they indicated whether the category of the semantic valence was congruent with the intonation type. They also described each emotional utterance by providing an adjective. The task results of Korean participants were compared with those of a control group of 49 Anglo-American students. Statistical analyses revealed that the incongruence between the semantic meaning and the intonation type interfered with American participants’ performance more than Korean participants. The adjective task results also showed that American participants were more attuned to the interplay between the semantic meaning and the intonation type than Korean participants.
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Keyword:
Cultures & Applied Linguistics (from 2021); Languages
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URL: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/43590/ https://doi.org/10.1017/S0272263120000674 https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/43590/3/43590.pdf
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How classroom environment and general grit predict foreign language classroom anxiety of Chinese EFL students
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Foreign language learning boredom: conceptualization and measurement
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Teacher enthusiasm and students’ social-behavioral learning engagement: the mediating role of student enjoyment and boredom in Chinese EFL classes
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Language choice in psychotherapy of multilingual clients: multilingual therapists’ perspective
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“We are not amused”. The perception of British humour by British and American English L1 users
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Reducing anxiety in the foreign language classroom: a positive psychology approach
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Differences in emotional reactions of Greek, Hungarian and British users of English when watching English television
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The role of language and cultural engagement in emotional fit with culture: an experiment comparing Chinese-English bilinguals to monolingual Brits and Chinese
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