Content Words (the Open Class of Words)

2020 ◽  
pp. 38-61
Author(s):  
Cornelia C. Paraskevas
Keyword(s):  
1997 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 257-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shoji Azuma ◽  
Richard P. Meier

ABSTRACTOne of the most striking facts about exchange errors in speech is that open class items are exchanged, but closed class items are not. This article argues that a pattern analogous to that in speech errors also appears in intrasentential code-switching. Intrasentential code-switching is the alternating use of two languages in a sentence by bilinguals. Studies of the spontaneous conversation of bilinguals have supported the claim that open class items may be codeswitched, but closed class items may not. This claim was tested by two sentence repetition experiments, one with Japanese/English bilinguals and the other with Spanish/English bilinguals. The results show that the switching of closed class items caused significantly longer response times and more errors than the switching of open class items.


2021 ◽  
pp. 104-127
Author(s):  
Markus Juutinen ◽  
Jukka Mettovaara

We provide an overview of indefinite pronouns in Saami languages that have been borrowed or calqued from Finnic, Scandinavian or Russian. We define indefinite pronouns in the traditional way, i.e. encompassing all pronouns not belonging to any other pronoun class. The treatment of Saami indefinite pronouns in earlier literature varies, but generally they haven’t received as much attention as other pronouns. From Finnic sources, Saami languages have borrowed e.g. pronouns harva ‘few’, joku ‘some(one)’, kaikki ‘all’, moni ‘many’ and muu ‘other’ as well as pronominal elements ikänänsä ‘-ever’, saati ‘let alone’ and vaikka ‘even (if)’. Loans from Scandinavian include e.g. mange ‘many’, noen ~ någon ‘some’ and same ~ samma ‘same’. Russian loans include pronominal elements ни- ‘not (even)’ хоть ‘even (if)’. Indefinite pronouns in Saami prove to be rather an open class, and elements with similar meanings have been borrowed time after time. The variation is especially abundant in pronouns of indifference and free choice. Most of the pronouns in our data have been noted as loans before, but there are some unnoticed cases. Especially these warrant further study.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nofrion Nofrion
Keyword(s):  

Artikel ini ditulis untuk menjelaskan hasil penerapan Kolaborasi Berbasis Lesson Study dalam Praktik Lapangan Mengajar Geografi Lanjut (PL-MGL) bagi mahasiswa Program Studi Magister Pendidikan Geografi, Universitas Negeri Padang. Melalui kolaborasi berbasis Lesson Study dengan melaksanakan tiga pilar utamanya yaitu “Plan, Do dan See” diharapkan dapat meningkatkan kompetensi mahasiswa sebagai calon dosen profesional. Penelitian ini menggunakan metode deskriptif yang melibatkan empat orang mahasiswa Program Magister Pendidikan Geografi, FIS, UNP dan satu kelas mahasiswa S1 Pendidikan Geografi pada mata kuliah Geografi Sosial. Satu orang mahasiswa bertindak sebagai dosen model dan tiga orang lainnya sebagai observer pembelajaran. Data yang dikumpulkan adalah data kompetensi dosen dalam pembelajaran (capaian kinerja dosen) yang dikumpulkan dengan lembar observasi pembelajaran serta data pelaksanaan pembelajaran sebagai bahan refleksi yang dikumpulkan dengan lembar refleksi pembelajaran “three ways conference”. Dosen model melaksanakan pembelajaran (open class) sebanyak empat kali pertemuan yang diawali dengan kegiatan “plan” dan diakhiri dengan kegiatan “see” yang dihadiri oleh tiga orang observer dan satu dosen penilai dan pembimbing. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa capaian kinerja dosen model dalam pembelajaran meningkat dari pertemuan 1 sampai ke pertemuan 4 serta mulai pertemuan kedua, dosen model sudah berhasil melewati batas minimal nilai kelulusan yaitu 70. Ditinjau dari kolaborasi peserta dalam kegiatan juga sangat baik. Hal ini terlihat dari kesungguhan peserta mengikuti semua tahap-tahap pembelajaran serta kontribusi mereka dalam kegiatan refleksi yang ditulis di lembar refleksi pembelajaran dan dibahas dengan teknik “three ways conference”. Mahasiswa PL-MGL berpendapat bahwa kegiatan seperti ini sangat positif bagi mereka. Walaupun membutuhkan waktu yang lebih banyak dan energi yang lebih besar, namun mereka mendapatkan pelajaran yang sangat bernilai. Hal ini juga diapresiasi oleh ketua Program Studi Magister pendidikan Geografi sebagai suatu langkah positif dalam mengembangkan kompetensi calon dosen secara kolaboratif sehingga terwujud komunitas belajar yang efektif.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Purwati Purwati ◽  
Jeinne Mumu ◽  
Benidiktus Tanujaya

This research was the qualitative research that aimed to improve students understanding of junior high mathematics study. In accordance with the object to be studied, then this research is done in 3 times open class consisting of the plan, do, and see for each cycle, with the subject of research was the students of mathematics education department of FKIP UNIPA whom contracting subjects junior mathematics studies. To improve students understanding of the material, implementation of peer tutor methods was continuously modified based on the findings of each cycle. Based on the results of the implementation of Lesson Study as much as 3 cycles obtained the concluded that the learning outcomes of learners used peer tutor approach that modified each cycle has a significant increase. This was evident from students who answered the test correctly given at the end of each meeting. In the first cycle, from 27 students only 4 who can answer the test correctly that is equal to 14.81%, the second cycle, from 27 learners only 10 which was able to answer the test correctly that was equal to 37,04%, whereas in cycle III, from 26 students 21 students able to answer correctly that was equal to 80,77%


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heidi Getz

Natural languages contain complex grammatical patterns. For example, in German, finite verbs occur second in main clauses while non-finite verbs occur last, as in 'dein Bruder möchte in den Zoo gehen' (“Your brother wants to go to the zoo”). Children easily acquire this type of morphosyntactic contingency (Poeppel & Wexler, 1993; Deprez & Pierce, 1994). There is extensive debate in the literature over the nature of children’s linguistic representations, but there are considerably fewer mechanistic ideas about how knowledge is actually acquired. Regarding German, one approach might be to learn the position of prosodically prominent open-class words (“verbs go 2nd or last”) and then fill in the morphological details. Alternatively, one could work in the opposite direction, learning the position of closed-class morphemes (“-te goes 2nd and -en goes last”) and fitting open-class items into the resulting structure. This second approach is counter-intuitive, but I will argue that it is the one learners take.Previous research suggests that learners focus distributional analysis on closed-class items because of their distinctive perceptual properties (Braine, 1963; Morgan, Meier, & Newport, 1987; Shi, Werker & Morgan, 1999; Valian & Coulson, 1988). The Anchoring Hypothesis (Valian & Coulson, 1988) posits that, because these items tend to occur at grammatically important points in the sentence (e.g., phrase edges), focusing on them helps learners acquire grammatical structure. Here I ask how learners use closed-class items to acquire complex morphosyntactic patterns such as the verb form/position contingency in German. Experiments 1-4 refute concerns that morphosyntactic contingencies like those in German are too complex to learn distributionally. Experiments 5-8 explore the mechanisms underlying learning, showing that adults and children analyze closed-class items as predictive of the presence and position of open-class items, but not the reverse. In these experiments, subtle mathematical distinctions in learners’ input had significant effects on learning, illuminating the biased computations underlying anchored distributional analysis. Taken together, results suggest that learners organize knowledge of language patterns relative to a small set of closed-class items—just as patterns are represented in modern syntactic theory (Rizzi & Cinque, 2016).


2001 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 814-825 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine Weber-Fox

The role of neurolinguistic factors in stuttering was investigated by determining whether individuals who stutter display atypical neural functions for language processing, even with no speech production demands. Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were obtained while 9 individuals who stutter (IWS) and 9 normally fluent speakers (NS) read sentences silently. The ERPs were elicited by: (a) closed-class words that provide structural or grammatical information, (b) open-class words that convey referential meaning, and (c) semantic anomalies (violations in semantic expectation). In standardized tests, adult IWS displayed similar grammatical and lexical abilities in both comprehension and production tasks compared to their matched, normally fluent peers. Yet the ERPs elicited in IWS for linguistic processing tasks revealed differences in functional brain organization. The ERPs elicited in IWS were characterized by reduced negative amplitudes for closed-class words (N280), open-class words (N350), and semantic anomalies (N400) in a temporal window of approximately 200–450 ms after word onsets. The overall pattern of results indicates that alterations in processing for IWS are related to neural functions that are common to word classes and perhaps involve shared, underlying processes for lexical access.


2000 ◽  
Vol 37 (02) ◽  
pp. 65-78
Author(s):  
Eric W. Sponberg

Project Amazon is a custom-designed Open Class 60 sailboat that began development in 1992. Detail design took place in 1995–96, and construction occurred in 1996–97. Project Amazon is an aluminum cat-ketch with two carbon fiber, free-standing, rotating wingmasts, an aluminum asymmetrical swinging keel, and twin carbon fiber, daggerboard-style rudders. Followers of the Around Alone and Vendée Globe single-handed, around-the-world races and developments of Open Class 60 sailboats may find these features unusual because collectively they do not fit mainstream racing sailboat design. None of Project Amazon's design features is totally new to sailboat naval architecture. These ideas have all been tried before, and all have been successful. But this is probably the first time that so many innovations have been combined into a single major racing sailboat design.


Author(s):  
David Stringer

Lexical semantics is concerned with inherent aspects of word meaning and the semantic relations between words, as well as the ways in which word meaning is related to syntactic structure. This chapter provides an introduction to some of the main themes in lexical semantic research, including the nature of the mental lexicon, lexical relations, and the decomposition of words into grammatically relevant semantic features. The mapping between the semantics of verbs and their associated syntax is discussed in terms of thematic roles, semantic structure theory, and feature selection. A review of some of the most influential findings in second language research involving both open-class and closed-class lexical items reveals important implications for classroom pedagogy and syllabus design in the domain of vocabulary instruction.


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