Academic literature on the topic 'Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics'

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Journal articles on the topic "Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics":

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Schmitz, John Robert. "Some polemical issues in Applied Linguistics." Revista Brasileira de Linguística Aplicada 10, no. 1 (2010): 21–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s1984-63982010000100003.

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In this paper, I look at three polemical issues in Applied Linguistics. I argue, first of all, that the desire for a stable definition of applied linguistics has by no means prevented research in the discipline. Secondly, I contend that the notion or "tradition" of "linguistics applied" (corpus linguistics or lexicography) is broader and more serious than "applicationism" (the use of linguistic formalisms, artificial practices, and terminology) in teaching material that are problematic and motivated by commercial interests. Thirdly, I argue that Educational Linguistics and Applied Linguistics have overlapping research objectives. In the course of the paper, I present some reservations about Educational Linguistics.
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Kramsch, Claire. "A New Field of Research: SLA-Applied Linguistics." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 115, no. 7 (December 2000): 1978–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/463621.

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Second language acquisition research (sla) is the systematic exploration of the conditions that make the acquisition of a foreign language possible, both in natural and in instructional settings. Its objects of study are the biological, linguistic, psychological, and emotional makeup of language learners and the educational, social, and institutional context of learning and teaching. Whereas language as a linguistic system is studied through the metalanguage of linguistics (phonology, syntax, and semantics), language learning, as psycholinguistic process and sociolinguistic discourse, is researched through the metadiscourse of applied linguistics: psycho- and sociolinguistics, anthropological and educational linguistics, discourse analysis, pragmatics, stylistics, and composition and literacy studies. These fields illuminate what it means to learn to speak, read, write, and interact in a foreign language, what it means to appropriate for oneself the national idiom of communities that share a history and a culture that are different from one's own. SLA provides the applied linguistic metadiscourse for the practice of language learning and teaching.
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Mann, G. "Review: Applied Linguistics." ELT Journal 58, no. 2 (April 1, 2004): 200–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/elt/58.2.200.

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Serebrianska, Irina. "APPLIED LINGUISTICS, COMPUTATIONAL LINGUISTICS AND OTHER INTERDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES AS EFFECTIVE INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES." Fìlologìčnì traktati 13, no. 1 (2021): 78–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.21272/ftrk.2021.13(1)-8.

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The article deals with the issues of interaction of linguistics and modern computer information technologies. It systematizes the actual problems and ways of their integration based on the analysis of the latest scientific works and the appropriate educational programs in higher education institutions all over the world. It draws attention to interdisciplinary sciences such as applied linguistics, computational linguistics, linguistic informatics, quantitative linguistics, mathematical linguistics, Internet linguistics, and integrated knowledge. The cooperation of two different areas is very productive and prospective. It contributes to the development of artificial intelligence and provides wider professional opportunities, effective intercultural communication and further improvement of society. The representatives of two, very different fields become mutually beneficial and complete each other successfully. The result of this interaction is a universal specialist which is in great demand nowadays. The main issues of the interaction of linguistics and modern information technologies are the following: 1) the role of virtual space and modern information technology in the development of linguistics; 2) the role of linguistics in the development of virtual space and information technologies, and the training of computer specialists; 3) the place of virtual space and modern information technologies in preparing linguists and translators (machine translation, translation systems, etc.); 4) the emergence of interdisciplinary sciences and educational courses at the intersection of two areas to provide society with professionals with integrated knowledge; duplication of their conceptual and terminological apparatus and research methods (due to their novelty); methodological support of the integrated educational process.
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د. محمود بن عبدالله المحمود, د. محمود بن عبدالله المحمود. "Associate professor of applied linguistics Applied Linguistics Dept., Arabic Linguistics Inst., King Saud University." journal of King Abdulaziz University Arts And Humanities 28, no. 13 (May 7, 2020): 199–235. http://dx.doi.org/10.4197/art.28-13.7.

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In the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the concern of the Arabic language is reflected in the Saudi language policy, which is displayed in all aspects of decisions, programs, projects and public life. The Kingdom’s development process has facilitated significant improvements at all levels, which enhances the need for continuous review of the language policy to ensure that it is achieving its goals. The current study seeks to discuss Saudi language policy in general, with a specific focus on Arabic language decisions, by utilizing an integrated approach, consisting of questionnaire and interview with a sample of administrative leaders in the Kingdom. The study seeks to discuss the ideology underlying Saudi language policy, as well as views on its nature, effectiveness, impact and implementation challenges; it also proposes a framework to build a Saudi language policy aimed at preserving previous achievements and achieving future aspirations. The study demonstrates the existence of social, cultural and linguistic ideologies that support the policies related to the Arabic language, such as considering it as a basic component of the political entity, a major part of the national identity; it also identifies concern for Arabic in the linguistic landscape, along with its centrality in the educational system, and the keenness of linguistic purification. The results also showed the participants’ agreement on the clarity of the decisions on language, as well as its comprehensiveness, need for development, and the extent to which individuals and institutions exhibit a weak awareness of it. Also, it reveals the existence of some problems that prevent its implementation, which are related to the decisions themselves, the procedural processes, or the administrative institutions. The study also provides suggested methodological recommendations to build the desired language policy, which proceeds from a research base and builds on current achievements.
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GOMES DE MATOS, Francisco. "Peace linguistics for language teachers." DELTA: Documentação de Estudos em Lingüística Teórica e Aplicada 30, no. 2 (December 2014): 415–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0102-445089915180373104.

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This text aims at presenting the concept of Peace Linguistics - origins and recent developments -- as being implemented in the author's ongoing work in that emerging branch of Applied Linguistics. Examples of applicational possibilities are given, with a focus on language teaching-learning and a Checklist is provided, of topics for suggested linguistic-educational research, centered on communicative peace.
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Kaszubski, P. "Corpora in Applied Linguistics." ELT Journal 57, no. 4 (October 1, 2003): 416–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/elt/57.4.416.

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Plaza Lara, Cristina. "Audiovisual Translation in Applied Linguistics: Educational Perspectives." TRANS. Revista de Traductología, no. 25 (December 30, 2021): 607–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.24310/trans.2021.v1i25.12940.

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Vladymyr Vladymyrovych, Dubichinsky. "Main areas applied linguistics in educational process." Novosibirsk State Pedagogical University Bulletin 5, no. 5 (October 7, 2015): 156–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.15293/2226-3365.1505.14.

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Schegloff, Emanuel A., Irene Koshik, Sally Jacoby, and David Olsher. "1. CONVERSATION ANALYSIS AND APPLIED LINGUISTICS." Annual Review of Applied Linguistics 22 (March 2002): 3–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0267190502000016.

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Conversation Analysis (CA) as a mode of inquiry is addressed to all forms of talk and other conduct in interaction, and, accordingly, touches on the concerns of applied linguists at many points. This review sketches and offers bibliographical guidance on several of the major relevant areas of conversation-analytic work—turn-taking, repair, and word selection—and indicates past or potential points of contact with applied linguistics. After covering these areas, we include a brief discussion of some key themes in CA's treatment of talk in institutional contexts. Finally, we discuss several established areas of applied linguistic work in which conversation analytic work is being explored—native, nonnative, and multilingual talk; talk in educational institutions; grammar and interaction; intercultural communication and comparative CA; and implications for designing language teaching tasks, materials, and assessment tasks. We end with some cautions on applying CA findings to other applied linguistic research contexts.

Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics":

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STEPHENS, DEBORAH ANNE. "LINGUISTIC ASPECTS OF CODESWITCHING AMONG SPANISH/ENGLISH BILINGUAL CHILDREN (SOCIOLINGUISTICS, PSYCHOLINGUISTICS, APPLIED LINGUISTICS)." Diss., The University of Arizona, 1986. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/188166.

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Codeswitching between languages is a uniquely bilingual mode of communication. The purpose of this dissertation is to enhance the current body of knowledge dealing with the phenomenon by analysing samples of speech produced by twenty-six Spanish/English bilingual children ranging in age from eight to twelve. Methods of analysis include theoretical linguistics, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, and educational linguistics. A discussion of relevant codeswitching research covering the past thirty years is presented. The data were collected during a reading study focusing on miscue analysis. The children read stories in English and retold them in both Spanish and English. The analysis considers the data from the four previously mentioned points of view. The linguistic analysis looks at the locations of switched constituents within the sentence and the frequency with which those constituents are switched. The data of this study are compared with that of other researchers, and a consideration of a formal grammar of codeswitching is presented. The sociolinguistic analysis addresses the effect of social and stylistic variables on codeswitching. The psycholinguistic analysis of codeswitching covers lexical storage, editing phenomena, and developmental aspects. Finally, some aspects of the education of bilinguals are considered by analysing the effect of the printed word on language switching and dialect shifting . The application of the results of the analysis to both theoretical issues and practical concerns is explored along with suggested areas for future research. The analyses show that young children's codeswitching initially favors less complex structures and is influenced by few social variables. As they grow older, they become more comfortable with switching grammatically complex structures, and they become aware of a greater variety of social factors. A separate grammar is not necessary for a complete description of codeswitching; a modified interdependance model of the two grammars can account for the codeswitching mode. Lastly, the written language becomes part of the speech situation in the classroom and affects the choice of language or dialect spoken.
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Bilz, Kelly Ann. "Changing the Mos Maiorum: Applied Linguistics and Latin Pedagogy." Ohio University Honors Tutorial College / OhioLINK, 2018. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ouhonors152483189473871.

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Fox, Jeremy. "Learning languages with computers : a history of computer assisted language learning from 1960 to 1990 in relation to education, linguistics and applied linguistics." Thesis, University of East Anglia, 1991. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.280930.

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Pinheiro, Raquel Martins Melo. "O frame aula: uma análise sociocognitiva do discurso docente." Universidade Federal de Juiz de Fora (UFJF), 2009. https://repositorio.ufjf.br/jspui/handle/ufjf/2758.

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Esta dissertação integra o projeto-mãe “Práticas de Oralidade e Cidadania” (MIRANDA, 2007 - FAPEMIG/CNPq) cuja discussão central converge para a crise das práticas de oralidade nas instâncias públicas da sociedade brasileira e seu reflexo na sala de aula, almejando um repensar da educação lingüística em sua equação com a educação de valores éticos e morais. Este trabalho é um estudo de caso e tem como propósito investigativo compreender como os professores conceptualizam o frame Aula, quais as práticas mais comuns realizadas por eles e seus alunos nesta cena e qual a perspectiva sobre uma aula ideal. Nosso corpus investigativo, construído a partir de um instrumento – um questionário semiaberto - é composto pelos discursos de 42 docentes do 6º. e 9º anos do ensino fundamental, da rede municipal de Juiz de Fora - MG, distribuídos por vinte e uma escolas urbanas. A metodologia utilizada para a operacionalização dos dados integra procedimentos quantitativos e qualitativos. Ferramentas computacionais disponibilizadas pela Linguística de Corpus (programa WordSmith Tools) foram usadas para fazer emergir padrões de freqüência. O aporte analítico central se funda nos pressupostos da Lingüística Cognitiva, em especial os processos de conceptualização e categorização (LAKOFF e JOHNSON, 1999; LAKOFF, 1987; FAUCONNIER e TURNER, 2002; CROFT, W. e CRUSE, 2004; SALOMÃO, 1999, 2006; MIRANDA, 2002) e a semântica de frames (FILLMORE, 1977, 1979, 1982), com destaque para o projeto lexicográfico FrameNet (www.framenet.icsi.berkeley.edu ) . Os estudos da Antropologia Evolucionista (TOMASELLO, 2003) e da Psicologia Cognitiva (CLARK, 1996) sobre o caráter cultural e interacional da cognição humana e da linguagem somam-se a este aporte teórico, também enriquecido pela perspectiva crítica de uma Linguística Aplicada comprometida com uma agenda ética (LOPES, 2006; RAJAGOPALAN, 2003; MIRANDA, 2005, 2006, 2008) e pelos estudos de ARAÚJO (2002, 2009) sobre ética, democracia escolar e educação comunitária. Como conclusões analíticas, erigem-se duas perspectivas sobre o frame Aula - aula como uma prática de TROCAS e aula como uma prática de TRANSFERENCIA. Destas projeções, emergem duas metáforas conceptuais: AULA É TROCA e AULA É TRANSFERÊNCIA. A aula como TROCA é a perspectiva majoritária no corpus. A aula é definida como uma açãoconjunta entre o professor e seus alunos no encalço de uma concepção sociointeracionista de educação, os professores se reconhecem no frame Aula como os Trocadores1, isto é, como os protagonistas da cena que detêm o objeto da troca, seja ele matéria ou experiência. Neste sentido, reafirmam sua relação assimétrica com o aluno. As ações docentes descritas pelos professores propõem a interface com as realidades dos alunos. Enquanto que metade das ações discentes descritas negligencia o frame escolar. A responsabilidade pela aula ideal, segundo os professores, reside, primeiramente, no docente e, por último na Família e no Estado. A quase ausência da família nesta cena e, por outro lado, o largo protagonismo do professor são, sem dúvida, dados merecedores de atenção. Assim, a busca por ações interventivas que resgatem os valores morais e éticos da sociedade, equacionando-os a uma educação lingüística mestiça constitui uma meta urgente.
This dissertation integrates the matrix-project “Orality, citizenship and their practices” (MIRANDA, 2007 - CNPq and FAPEMIG), which has as central discussion focus on the orality practices crisis in public instances of Brazilian society and its reflex in the classroom, and also aims a rethinking of the linguistic education in its equation with the education of ethic and moral values. This paper is a case study and has as investigative purpose to comprehend how teachers conceptualize the Class frame, which practices are most commonly used in this scene and what is the perspective of an ideal class. Our investigative corpus, built from an instrument – a semi-open questionnaire – is composed by discourses of 42 teachers from the 6th to the 9th year of elementary school, of the municipal public education system of Juiz de Fora – MG, spread over 21 urban schools. The methodology used for the operationalization of data integrates quantitative and qualitative procedures. Computational tools from the Corpus Linguistics (WordSmith Tools Programme) were used to emerge frequency models. The central analytic contribution bases on Cognitive Linguistics assumptions, specially the conceptualization and categorization processes (LAKOFF and JOHNSON, 1999; LAKOFF, 1987; FAUCONNIER and TURNER, 2002; CROFT, W. and CRUSE, 2004; SALOMÃO, 1999, 2006; MIRANDA, 2002) and the frames semantics (FILLMORE, 1977, 1979, 1982), with highlight on the lexicographic project FrameNet (www.framenet.icsi.berkeley.edu). The Evolutionist Anthropology studies (TOMASELLO, 2003) and the Cognitive Psychology (CLARK, 1996) about the cultural and interactive character of human cognition and language add up to this theoretical contribution, also enriched by the critical perspective of Applied Linguistics that is committed with an ethic agenda (LOPES, 2006; RAJAGOPALAN, 2003; MIRANDA, 2005, 2006, 2008) and by the studies from ARAÚJO (2002, 2009) about ethics, scholar democracy and communitarian education. As analytical conclusions rear two perspectives about the Class frame – class as EXCHANGES practice and class as TRANSFERENCE practice. From these projections emerge two conceptual metaphors: CLASS IS EXCHANGE and CLASS IS TRANSFERENCE. The class as EXCHANGE is a majority perspective in the corpus. The class is defined as a conjunct-action between the teacher and the students together with a sociointeractionist conception of education. Teachers recognize themselves in the Class frame as the Exchangers 1, i.e. as the protagonists of the scene that detain the exchange object, this last being matter or experience. In this sense, they reassure their asymmetric relation with the student. The teachers' actions described by themselves propose the interface with the reality of the students. Whereas half of the described student actions neglect the scholar frame. The responsibility for the the ideal class, according to the teachers, is primarily held by teachers and finally by Family and the State. The almost absence of family in this scene and, on the other hand, the broad protagonism of of the teacher are, undoubtedly, attention-worthy data. Thus, the search for interventional actions that rescue moral and ethic values of society, equating them to a hybrid linguistic education, compose an urgent goal.
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Liviero, Sara. "Teachers' reported beliefs about the role of grammar, and their observed pedagogical practices of foreign languages teaching in England." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10871/16005.

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The purpose of this dissertation was to investigate teachers’ beliefs about a fundamental aspect of foreign language teaching: grammar. Whilst progressively reinstated in the national curriculum and consistently sustained by foreign languages teachers’ practices, grammar’s perceived irrelevance for assessment criteria of the nationally adopted method of assessment - the General Certificate of Secondary Education – kept it caught in conflicting discourses of policy, linguistic research and teaching practices. Whilst foreign languages policy and practice kept converging towards increasing focus on forms in language education along correspondences with linguistic research, the assessment has remained focused on generic communicative, skill-focused criteria. My small-scale research aimed to find how foreign languages teachers translated grammar teaching policy and possible theoretical guidelines in their teaching practices, by collecting data through interviews, observations and think-alouds. The findings revealed disparate educational contexts, approaches, as well as interpretations of grammar teaching. It led me to realise the necessity to probe further into a much more thorough theoretical and methodological underpinning of foreign languages education. As this study concludes, the secondary foreign languages curriculum has become disapplied, and schools and teachers have been left to devise their idiosyncratic foreign language learning strategies and rationales. As foreign languages teaching becomes anchored in the primary education curricular provision, this research hopes to document the need to frame theoretical and methodological guidelines, a consistent foreign languages education rationale, leading to a consistent and convincing education and provision of future foreign language teachers.
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Hutter, Jo-Anne. "A Corpus Based Analysis of Noun Modification in Empirical Research Articles in Applied Linguistics." PDXScholar, 2015. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/2211.

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Previous research has established the importance of the nouns and noun modification in academic writing because of their commonness and complexity. However, little is known about how noun modification varies across the rhetorical sections of research articles. Such a perspective is important because it reflects the interplay between communicative function and linguistic form. This study used a corpus of empirical research articles from the fields of applied linguistics and language teaching to explore the connection between article sections (Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion; IMRD) and six types of noun modification: relative clauses, ing-clause postmodifiers, ed-clause postmodifiers, prepositional postmodifiers, premodifying nouns, and attributive adjectives. First the frequency of these six types of noun modification was compared across IMRD sections. Second, the study also used a hand coded analysis of the structure and structural patterns of a sample of noun phrases through IMRD sections. The results of the analyses showed that noun modification is not uniform across IMRD sections. Significant differences were found in the rates of use for attributive adjectives, premodifying nouns, and prepositional phrase postmodifiers. There were no significant differences between sections for relative clauses, ing-clause postmodifiers, or ed-clause postmodifiers. The differences between sections for attributive adjectives, premodifying nouns, and prepositional phrases illustrate the way the functions of these structures intersects with the functions of IMRD sections. For example, Methods sections describe research methods, which often have premodifying nouns (corpus analysis, conversation analysis, speech sample, etc.); this function of Methods sections results in a higher use of premodifying nouns compared to other sections. Results for structures of noun phrase across IMRD sections showed that the common noun modification patterns, such as premodifying noun only or attributive adjective with prepositional phrase postmodifier, were mostly consistent across sections. Noun phrase structures including pre-/post- or no modification did have differences across sections, with Introduction sections the most frequently modified and Methods sections the least frequently modified. The different functions of IMRD sections call for different rates of usage for noun modification, and the results reflected this. The results of this research benefit teachers of graduate students of applied linguistics in students' research reading and writing by describing the use of noun modification in the sections of empirical research articles and aiding teachers in the design of materials to clarify the use of noun modification in these IMRD sections.
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Folkeryd, Jenny W. "Writing with an Attitude : Appraisal and student texts in the school subject of Swedish." Doctoral thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för lingvistik och filologi, 2006. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-7410.

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Learning in school is in many respects done through language. However, it has been shown that the language of school assignments is seldom explicitly discussed in school. Writing tasks are furthermore assigned without clear guidelines for how certain lexical choices make one text more powerful than another. The present study is a contribution to a linguistic and pedagogical discussion of student writing. More specifically the focus is on the use of evaluative language in texts written by students in the school subject of Swedish in grades 5, 8 and 11. The major investigations of the study have been accommodated within the theoretical framework of Appraisal. An overview is given of the language resources in the student texts for constructing emotion, judging behavior in ethical terms and valuing objects aesthetically. Another question addressed is that of how attitudinal meaning is intensified, thus creating greater or lesser degrees of positivity or negativity associated with the feelings. The results show that manifestations of attitude are found in practically all texts in the study. However, variations are noted in relation to different genres, age, proficiency level, language background and gender. A contribution of the study in relation to the theoretical framework upon which it draws is an extension of the system of Attitude as well as an identification of different patterns in the use of attitudinal resources. These patterns are furthermore discussed in relation to how students talk about their own written production in terms of text movability. Results indicate that students with a high degree of text movability also use attitudinal resources to a large extent. It is argued that applying the linguistic tool of Appraisal can facilitate a discussion of how to make one aspect of the hidden curriculum more visible, namely, how to write with an Attitude.
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McGarry, Theresa. "Identifying and Encouraging Active Learning Through Speech Events." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2005. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/6168.

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Edling, Agnes. "Abstraction and authority in textbooks : The textual paths towards specialized language." Doctoral thesis, Uppsala University, Department of Linguistics and Philology, 2006. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-6989.

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During a few hours of a school day, a student might read textbook texts which are highly diversified in terms of abstraction. Abstraction is a central feature of specialized language and the transition from everyday language to specialized language is one of the most important things formal education can offer students. That transition is the focus of this thesis.

This study introduces a new three-graded classification of abstraction including the levels of specificity, generalization and abstraction, based on a discussion of the concept of abstraction. The investigations performed, based on this classification, show that texts from different subject areas display distinct patterns of abstraction. The Swedish literary texts had the lowest degree of abstraction, the social science texts had an intermediate degree and the natural science texts were the most generalized and abstract. The results also show that the degree of abstraction in the textbook texts increases in later grade levels.

The thesis presents a new way of analyzing shifts between levels of abstraction and their functions. Interestingly, the texts with a medium degree of abstraction, the social science texts, are the ones with the greatest variety in shifts. The functions of the shifts differ with respect to cultural domains. The shifts in the Swedish literary texts in general belong to the everyday domain while the shifts in the natural science texts belong to a specialized domain. The shifts in the social science texts had features of both domains.

A secondary aim of the thesis is to develop the understanding of the relationship between author and reader in the texts. The results from my investigation of modality in the Swedish textbook texts confirm the earlier findings from English and Spanish textbooks. In comparison to other text types, textbook texts present knowledge in a more authoritative and less modalized way.

From time to time, abstraction is described as a feature that hinders students accessing texts. Some researchers even suggest a removal of features of specialized language in textbook texts, in order to increase students’ understanding. However, in a society where specialized knowledge is necessary, the access to specialized texts is important. A democratic view of education and school mandates that children and adolescents have the opportunity to encounter and learn to encounter specialized language in school. In analyzing the texts special attention is paid to the relationship between the texts, the contexts of use and the student readers.

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Aguiar, Maristela Torres de. "Interface dos discursos de crianças / familiares em tratamento de câncer e pediatras oncologistas: uma análise crítica." Universidade Católica de Pernambuco, 2008. http://www.unicap.br/tede//tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=396.

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O presente trabalho tem como objetivo analisar as narrativas de crianças e familiares em tratamento de câncer, assim como de médicas pediatras-oncologistas que cuidam dessas crianças. A teoria da análise crítica do discurso embasou esta pesquisa, a partir de uma relação entre prática social e prática discursiva e do papel de alguns discursos emblemáticos que permeiam a interação entre os sujeitos. Os discursos foram analisados com profundidade, segundo as formações identitárias, as interfaces discursivas das crianças em tratamento de câncer, seus familiares e pediatras oncologistas. A Teoria Lingüística fornece os instrumentos para se verificar as interfaces do intra e do interdiscurso, modalizadores, ethos, polidez e elementos metafórico-semânticos, o que pode ser uma contribuição para o processo de ensino e de prática médicas. Para se fazer Educação em Saúde, é preciso primeiro manter uma comunicação aberta com familiares e paciente, conhecer e respeitar a linguagem e as experiências culturais da comunidade a ser atendida, assim como ter uma postura ética inerente ao profissional da área médica
This study aims to analyze the narratives of children in cancer treatment and their families who are being taken care of, as well as their oncopediatricians who are taking care of. The critical discourse analysis theory gave foundation to this research, from a relationship between social practice and discursive practice and from the role of some emblematic discourses that penetrates the interaction between subjects. The discourses were further analyzed as for the identity formations, the discursive interfaces of cancer treatment children, their families, and their oncopediatricians. Linguistic Theory provides the tools to verify the interfaces of discourse of the intra- and inter discourse, modal words, ethos, politeness and metaphoricsemantic elements, which can be a contribution to the education and medical practice process . Health Education must first focus on an open communication between the patients and their families, to know and to respect the language and cultural experiences of the community that will be assisted, as well as to maintain an ethical attitude inherent to the medical professional

Books on the topic "Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics":

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Stubbs, Michael. Educational linguistics. Oxford, UK: B. Blackwell, 1986.

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McDonough, Steven H. Applied linguistics in language education. London: Arnold, 2002.

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Bartels, Nat, ed. Applied Linguistics and Language Teacher Education. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-2954-3.

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Nat, Bartels, ed. Applied linguistics and language teacher education. New York: Springer, 2005.

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Piper, David. Language theories and educational practice. San Francisco: Mellen Research University Press, 1992.

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Mohebbi, Hassan, and Christine Coombe, eds. Research Questions in Language Education and Applied Linguistics. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-79143-8.

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Richards, Jack C. Longman dictionary of language teaching and applied linguistics. 2nd ed. Essex, England: Longman, 1992.

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Richards, Jack C. Longman dictionary of language teaching and applied linguistics. Harlow: Longman, 1992.

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Richards, Jack C. Longman dictionary of language teaching and applied linguistics. 3rd ed. New York: Longman, 2002.

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1959-, Hickey Tina, Williams Jenny 1938-, and Irish Association for Applied Linguistics., eds. Language, education, and society in a changing world. Dublin: IRAAL/Multilingual Matters, 1996.

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Book chapters on the topic "Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics":

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Weideman, Albert. "A Linguistic Explanation for the Foundations of Applied Linguistics." In Educational Linguistics, 11–38. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-41731-8_2.

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Weideman, Albert. "The Scientific Status of Applied Linguistics." In Educational Linguistics, 53–74. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-41731-8_4.

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Weideman, Albert. "An Inter-Disciplinary View of Applied Linguistics." In Educational Linguistics, 39–51. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-41731-8_3.

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Weideman, Albert. "Applied Linguistics as a Discipline of Design." In Educational Linguistics, 75–95. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-41731-8_5.

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Weideman, Albert. "Themes and Styles of Doing Applied Linguistics." In Educational Linguistics, 149–82. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-41731-8_8.

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Bartels, Nat. "Researching Applied Linguistics in Language Teacher Education." In Educational Linguistics, 1–26. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-2954-3_1.

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Weideman, Albert. "Design Principles and The Future of Applied Linguistics." In Educational Linguistics, 211–31. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-41731-8_11.

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Weideman, Albert. "A Returning Question: Defining the Field of Applied Linguistics." In Educational Linguistics, 197–209. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-41731-8_10.

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Bartels, Nat. "Applied Linguistics and Language Teacher Education: What We Know." In Educational Linguistics, 405–24. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-2954-3_23.

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Whong, Melinda. "Applied Generative SLA: The Need for an Agenda and a Methodology." In Educational Linguistics, 231–47. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-6362-3_12.

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Conference papers on the topic "Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics":

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Dabbagh, Lanja, and Wrya Ali. "12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics." In 12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics. Salahaddin University-Erbil, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31972/vesal12.08.

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Interpreting as a profession has become the center of interest and focus for many linguists, translation scholars, translators, and professionals. Interpreting has played a vital role in bridging the gap and maintaining relationships among people of different languages. The output of interpreting, unlike written translation is entirely oral leaving behind no written proof. Interpreting is an activity or a process which consists of the facility of oral and sign language communicated either consecutively or simultaneously between two or more speakers who are not speaking the same language. Interpretation is the act of transposing a message from one language to another immediately in real time. The study sheds light mostly upon non- linguistic factors in the process of interpreting which can be of no less important than the linguistic ones. The aim of the study is to provide an overview of interpreting in general with a detailed description of the non- linguistic strategies or skills from the perspective of interpreting process. Bearing these in tactics in mind, the interpreter tackles the interpreting problems and difficulties in a more skillful way.
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Sheveleva, A. S. "MULTIMEDIA EDUCATIONAL PUBLICATIONS FOR APPLIED EDUCATIONAL ONLINE PROGRAMS." In ACTUAL PROBLEMS OF LINGUISTICS AND LITERARY STUDIES. TSU Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/978-5-907442-02-3-2021-142.

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Ahmed, Mohammed, and Rizgar Mahmood. "12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics." In 12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics. Salahaddin University-Erbil, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31972/vesal12.07.

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To be able to use the target language sentence structure efficiently, a speaker needs to learn and have a very large number of words (Nation, 2013). Research shows that understanding the meaning of a word is not sufficient, rather, it involves more than just its meaning; such as spelling, and grammatical behavior (Pigada & Schmitt, 2006). Vocabulary acquisition requires effective methods. One of the methods of learning vocabulary is learning the process of word formation in the target language. This research aims at investigating and exploring one of the productive word-formation processes in the English language which is conversion or zero-derivation in which the grammatical category of a word is changed without adding any affixes. For instance, every day, I walk(V) to the park near my house, or, every day, I take a walk(N) with my dog. The results will have several pedagogical implications for researchers, teachers, and learners. Based on the presented data in the current study, it can be concluded that zero-morph can be considered one of the productive word-formation processes, and pedagogical implications are discussed in the discussion section.
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Mohammad, Alaa. "12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics." In 12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics. Salahaddin University-Erbil, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31972/vesal12.05.

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Semantic transfer, or sometimes semantic change, occurs when a word drops its old meaning and comes to refer to something different. This results in a change in a word’s meaning. The changes in meaning are usually gradual. Many words in both languages, English and Kurdish, have gone through semantic transfer, whether the change is an extension or narrowing of the original meaning of them. This paper compares a set of words in the two languages in terms of their semantically transferred sense of the original meaning they used to convey. Those words are sometimes used interchangeably by the Kurdish students as a result of language interference between their first language which is Kurdish, and English which is the target language of their learning.
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Hamad, Pakhshan. "12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics." In 12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics. Salahaddin University-Erbil, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31972/vesal12.04.

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The present study attempts to find out the distinctiveness of juncture(pauses within words, phrases and sentences) in English and central Kurdish. Juncture is the relationship between one sound and the sounds that immediately precede and follow it. It is a morphophonemic phenomenon with double signification , a suprasegmental phoneme which changes the meaning and is important for phonological descriptions of languages. The aim of this study is to see how juncture affects the meaning of words , phrases and sentences. Slow or rapid speech can also determine the use of juncture which marks the break between sounds and the phonological boundary of words, phrases or sentences. However, the ambiguity of meaning resulting from the placement of juncture can be solved by context. Stress placement on certain words also affects the use of juncture and leads to a change in meaning. In this study, English and Central Kurdish junctures were identified within words, phrases and sentences. Based on the data collected and presented, it was found out that juncture in English is distinctive at all levels , namely , simple words, phrases and sentences .In Central Kurdish, however, juncture is distinctive in compound words and sentences. As for the sentence level, because Kurdish is an agglutinative language, there are cases where the pause or juncture is closely related to the morphological structure of the words and the personal clitics and prefixes added to the end. As for the implications of the results in the field of practice , teachers must take these into consideration while teaching stress , intonation and other aspects of connected speech.
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Ismail, Rekan, and Nawsha Ghaleb. "12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics." In 12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics. Salahaddin University-Erbil, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31972/vesal12.02.

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Minor changes and improvements have been made to syllabi in the universities in Erbil-Kurdistan over the years. Hence, this research aims to bring to light the need for student-centered syllabus in Erbil- Kurdistan. It further aims to find out the degree to which the syllabi of syntax class are student-centered, assess the items mentioned in the syntax syllabi, and identify the frequency range of the existing student-centered factors. Additionally, it identifies the items in the syllabi that need to be modified towards a more student-centered format. Document review is adopted as a quantitative research tool for collecting data. 15 syllabi of syntax class have been collected in 8 public and private universities in Erbil-Kurdistan. To assess the learner-centeredness of the collected syllabi, the researchers adapted Cullen and Harris’ (2009) rubric in accordance to the syllabi in the universities in Kurdistan. The results show that syllabi of syntax class in the public and private universities in Erbil-Kurdistan are teacher-centered to a high degree. Moreover, the findings also show that the syllabi of syntax class would sound more student-centered if teachers start working on certain elements in their syllabi, such as accessibility of teacher, learning rationale, teacher’s role, student’s role, grades, feedback mechanisms, and revision/redoing. The results will benefit all the teachers in Erbil-Kurdistan and show them a clear picture of the state of their syllabi in terms of student-centeredness and encourage them to work on certain aspects in their syllabi to design a more student-centered syllabus.
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Bilgin, Recep, and Yunus Yildiz. "12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics." In 12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics. Salahaddin University-Erbil, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31972/vesal12.12.

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The categories introduced to the world of science by Aristotle basically express the different situations necessary for the definition of a noun. According to Aristotle, who put forward 9 different categories related to the noun, the features that will distinguish an object from others are determined by these categories. In its definition, the noun is expressed as substance, while the other categories are determined as accidents. In addition, he mentioned 4 different causes of the existence of an object. All these are effectively used for word definitions, especially in dictionaries. The concepts of universal, which are related to the word, and differentia, which distinguish the word from others in its own kind, are the concepts that dictionaries especially focus on. Knowing and using these concepts correctly by teachers will help students understand better. This study was conducted to confirm this aim. In this study, 15 teachers were asked to define the given words and then the problematic situations in the definitions were mentioned to the teachers. Afterwards, the issue of categories and what universal and differentia are, were explained to the teachers and asked to redefine the words. In this case, it has been observed that teachers were more successful. In addition, the word definitions were given to the students, and they were asked what the word was. The rate of students knowing the words correctly was found to be sixty-two percent.
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Salih, Rashwan. "12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics." In 12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics. Salahaddin University-Erbil, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31972/vesal12.03.

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This paper investigates the effect of using discourse markers on the writing skills of Kurdish university students. By revising the related literature, it appeared that so far there is no consensus on the actual effect of the explicit presence of discourse markers on foreign language writing. Many studies concluded that different discourse markers have different effects on the writing of foreign language learners (Morell, 2004; Ying, 2007; Castro and Marcela 2009; Dariush and Mohamad 2015, etc.). The current research tries to find out if there are any cross-linguistic factors that could cause issues for students in EFL modules. Data for the current study were collected from essays written by Kurdish students at the English Department in Salahaddin University, Erbil. In total, 20 essays were received with total of 19872 words and total 261 DMs were found in the data. A mixture of quantitative and qualitative methods was used to analyse the data. The raw frequencies of the DMs were: Additive (101 = 0.5 %), Adversative (45 = 0.22 %), Causal / Conditional (83 = 0.4 %), and Temporal (32 = 0.16 %). The findings suggested that level of attention to and appropriate use of discourse markers were significantly unbalanced, and various misuses were found. Sample errors in using the DMs were selected for a qualitative analysis. It is recommended that discourse markers are taught individually not in groups with more focus on the more difficult discourse marker types.
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Chicho, Kanar, and Ahmed Abdulla. "12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics." In 12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics. Salahaddin University-Erbil, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31972/vesal12.06.

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Language educators aim to promote speaking skills because speaking skills are one of the productive skills that make language learners create meaningful conversations and dialogues with the target language. There are different methods and strategies for promoting speaking skills, such as communicative language teaching (CLT) and story-telling strategies. CLT aims to have communication and discussions in the class, and so does the story-telling. The researchers conducted studies on making foreign language learners speak the target language. They concluded that enhancing speaking skills requires actively involved students, and for that, the language instructors need to use some tools and strategies. Moreover, the story-telling strategy involves the students practicing their speaking skills, and this technique aims to improve their speaking skills in a real-life situation. Thus, this research paper explores the values of story-telling strategies in the EFL classroom. A qualitative research design was implemented, and the data was collected from secondary sources such as research articles. For analyzing the data, a thematic analysis was used. The results demonstrated that story-telling was highly sufficient in improving speaking skills. It enhances the capacity of capturing new vocabularies, fostering pronunciation. It also enables the learner’s imitation skill, expanding the learner’s communication, including their criticality, and increasing the learning desire to use the target language. In brief, story-telling strategies help the language learners to use the target language, and it also helps the learners to improve their speaking skills.
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Ibrahim, Sangar. "12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics." In 12th International Conference on Educational Studies and Applied Linguistics. Salahddin University-Erbil, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.31972/vesal12.01.

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Reports on the topic "Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics":

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BAGIYAN, A., and A. VARTANOV. SYSTEMS ACQUISITION IN MULTILINGUAL EDUCATION: THE CASE OF AXIOLOGICALLY CHARGED LEXIS. Science and Innovation Center Publishing House, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.12731/2077-1770-2021-13-4-3-48-61.

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The process of mastering, systematizing and automatizing systems language skills occupies a key place in the theory and practice of teaching foreign languages and cultures. Following the main trends of modern applied linguistics in the field of multilingual research, we hypothesize the advisability of using the lexical approach in mastering the entire complex of systems skills (grammar, vocabulary, phonology, functions, discourse) in students receiving multilingual education at higher educational institutions. In order to theoretically substantiate the hypothesis, the authors carry out structural, semantic, and phonological analysis of the main lexical units (collocations). After this, linguodidactic analysis of students’ hypothetical problems and, as a result, problems related to the teaching of relevant linguistic and axiological features is carried out. At the final stage of the paper, a list of possible outcomes from the indicated linguistic and methodological problematic situations is given. This article is the first in the cycle of linguodidactic studies of the features of learning and teaching systems language skills in a multilingual educational space.
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Hutter, Jo-Anne. A Corpus Based Analysis of Noun Modification in Empirical Research Articles in Applied Linguistics. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.2208.

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Johnston, Kathryn. Lexical Bundles in Applied Linguistics and Literature Writing: A Comparison of Intermediate English Learners and Professionals. Portland State University Library, January 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.15760/etd.5366.

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PESSOA, Marcelo. Professor da UEMG Frutal propõe patente de novo alfabeto para a língua portuguesa e registra marca editorial no INPI. AKEDIA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.33726/relatsearcher24477656v897a82022p01a01.

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After linguistic studies carried out over more than 20 years, as a function of teaching in Higher Education, Prof. Dr. Marcelo Pessoa developed a new alphabet for the Portuguese language, from which, at the end of 2019, he applied for a patent with the INPI (National Institute of Industrial Property), traceable by the Process Number: BR 20 2019 023894 7. The patent registration is still pending, however, in the same body, Marcelo has already obtained the registration of an editorial trademark, valid for 10 years, related to a scientific dissemination journal, born within the UEMG, traceable at the INPI by the Process No. 918420423.
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Zelenskyi, Arkadii A. Relevance of research of programs for semantic analysis of texts and review of methods of their realization. [б. в.], December 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.31812/123456789/2884.

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One of the main tasks of applied linguistics is the solution of the problem of high-quality automated processing of natural language. The most popular methods for processing natural-language text responses for the purpose of extraction and representation of semantics should be systems that are based on the efficient combination of linguistic analysis technologies and analysis methods. Among the existing methods for analyzing text data, a valid method is used by the method using a vector model. Another effective and relevant means of extracting semantics from the text and its representation is the method of latent semantic analysis (LSA). The LSA method was tested and confirmed its effectiveness in such areas of processing the native language as modeling the conceptual knowledge of the person; information search, the implementation of which LSA shows much better results than conventional vector methods.

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