Purpose: This study describes a post hoc analysis of segmental, stress, and syllabification errors in third graders\u27 productions of derived English words with the stress-changing suffixes -ity and -ic. We investigated whether (a) derived word frequency influences error patterns, (b) stress and syllabification errors always co-occur, and (c) derived word stress pattern affects errors. Method: A total of 1,900 productions from 81 third-grade children were transcribed and coded. The targets were 8 high-frequency (HF) and 8 low-frequency (LF) real English words and 8 nonsense (NS) derived words. Participants combined a suffix and a base word to produce a derived word. The vowel-initial suffixes required both stress and syllabic changes in a ...
Oral language is the foundation on which literacy initially builds. Between early developing oral la...
d. OT issues B. Syntax and stress (2) Speakers manipulate stresses to conform to rhythmic alternatio...
This study tested the claim of input-based accounts of language acquisition that children's inflecti...
Purpose: This study describes a post hoc analysis of segmental, stress, and syllabification errors i...
This study examined the effects of lexical frequency on children\u27s production of accurate primary...
Purpose: Little is known about the phonological aspects of derivational processes. Neutral suffixes ...
Purpose: This study examined whether lexical frequency, semantic knowledge, or sentence context affe...
Considering the importance of word and stem frequency in the adult lexical processing literature, an...
Purpose: This study examined relationships between 3rd graders\u27 metalinguistic skills (phonologic...
Hesitations have been considered to serve both cognitive and linguistic functions. This study presen...
This study examined third grade children’s use of hesitations in elicited productions of derived wor...
Spelling ability is not static; rather, as children age, learning how to encode morphophonologically...
PURPOSE: Accurate production of lexical stress within English polysyllabic words is critical for int...
Word stress often causes problem for learners of English. This is due to the apparent irregularity o...
Low frequency words in English show a regularity effect; words whose spellings represent regular pho...
Oral language is the foundation on which literacy initially builds. Between early developing oral la...
d. OT issues B. Syntax and stress (2) Speakers manipulate stresses to conform to rhythmic alternatio...
This study tested the claim of input-based accounts of language acquisition that children's inflecti...
Purpose: This study describes a post hoc analysis of segmental, stress, and syllabification errors i...
This study examined the effects of lexical frequency on children\u27s production of accurate primary...
Purpose: Little is known about the phonological aspects of derivational processes. Neutral suffixes ...
Purpose: This study examined whether lexical frequency, semantic knowledge, or sentence context affe...
Considering the importance of word and stem frequency in the adult lexical processing literature, an...
Purpose: This study examined relationships between 3rd graders\u27 metalinguistic skills (phonologic...
Hesitations have been considered to serve both cognitive and linguistic functions. This study presen...
This study examined third grade children’s use of hesitations in elicited productions of derived wor...
Spelling ability is not static; rather, as children age, learning how to encode morphophonologically...
PURPOSE: Accurate production of lexical stress within English polysyllabic words is critical for int...
Word stress often causes problem for learners of English. This is due to the apparent irregularity o...
Low frequency words in English show a regularity effect; words whose spellings represent regular pho...
Oral language is the foundation on which literacy initially builds. Between early developing oral la...
d. OT issues B. Syntax and stress (2) Speakers manipulate stresses to conform to rhythmic alternatio...
This study tested the claim of input-based accounts of language acquisition that children's inflecti...