This study explored access to grammatical gender during naming in Hebrew. Studies of anomia and tip-of-the-tongue states (TOT) found that speakers of various languages (Italian, Spanish, German, Dutch) have information about the grammatical gender of words they fail to retrieve. In Hebrew, on the other hand, a TOT study found that Hebrew speakers could not provide gender information. To test access to gender in single words in Hebrew we used an implicit measure – the analysis of paraphasias of anomic patients with respect to whether or not they preserved the grammatical gender of the target word. The rationale behind this measure was that when a paraphasia is created, it generally conforms to the partial knowledge the speaker has on the tar...
Jescheniak and Levelt (Jescheniak, J.-D., Levelt, W.J.M. 1994. Journal of Experimental Psychology: L...
The Nakh languages Chechen and Tsova-Tush each have a five-valued gender system: masculine, feminine...
Two experiments investigate whether native speakers of French can use a noun's phonological end...
Access to grammatical gender in Hebrew was examined using gender decisions, lexical decision, two-wo...
In the present study we examined the influence of manipulating the animacy of the sentential sub-jec...
Beliefs about a language rarely correspond to how it is used. This is especially true for Hebrew, a ...
Six contributions form the special section that Cortex devoted to the neurospcyhology of grammatic...
ABSTRACT: All Hebrew nouns have a grammatical gender, masculine or feminine. Morphosyntactic agreeme...
This paper aims to demonstrate the reliability of morphosyntactic versus morphophonological features...
Variationist sociolinguistics is a branch of sociolinguistics that uses the quantitative method know...
In this paper we assessed the effect of gender morphology on children's comprehension of object rela...
According to recent models of word production, when we name a picture, we first retrieve the meaning...
The term 'gender' requires discussion, since linguistic traditions differ here. This requires us to ...
A proposta desta dissertação é analisar as questões de gênero da língua hebraica, atentando para o p...
A non-trivial number of the world’s languages have grammatical gender linked to biological sex. It i...
Jescheniak and Levelt (Jescheniak, J.-D., Levelt, W.J.M. 1994. Journal of Experimental Psychology: L...
The Nakh languages Chechen and Tsova-Tush each have a five-valued gender system: masculine, feminine...
Two experiments investigate whether native speakers of French can use a noun's phonological end...
Access to grammatical gender in Hebrew was examined using gender decisions, lexical decision, two-wo...
In the present study we examined the influence of manipulating the animacy of the sentential sub-jec...
Beliefs about a language rarely correspond to how it is used. This is especially true for Hebrew, a ...
Six contributions form the special section that Cortex devoted to the neurospcyhology of grammatic...
ABSTRACT: All Hebrew nouns have a grammatical gender, masculine or feminine. Morphosyntactic agreeme...
This paper aims to demonstrate the reliability of morphosyntactic versus morphophonological features...
Variationist sociolinguistics is a branch of sociolinguistics that uses the quantitative method know...
In this paper we assessed the effect of gender morphology on children's comprehension of object rela...
According to recent models of word production, when we name a picture, we first retrieve the meaning...
The term 'gender' requires discussion, since linguistic traditions differ here. This requires us to ...
A proposta desta dissertação é analisar as questões de gênero da língua hebraica, atentando para o p...
A non-trivial number of the world’s languages have grammatical gender linked to biological sex. It i...
Jescheniak and Levelt (Jescheniak, J.-D., Levelt, W.J.M. 1994. Journal of Experimental Psychology: L...
The Nakh languages Chechen and Tsova-Tush each have a five-valued gender system: masculine, feminine...
Two experiments investigate whether native speakers of French can use a noun's phonological end...