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Facilitating participation: communicative practices in interaction between native and nonnative speakers of JapaneseIkeda, Tomoko 28 August 2008 (has links)
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Facilitating participation : communicative practices in interaction between native and nonnative speakers of JapaneseIkeda, Tomoko, 1979- 22 August 2011 (has links)
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Learners’ practice and theory about Japanese honorifics : an oral interview activity with native speakersOde, Maki 11 1900 (has links)
Japanese honorifics (JH) are challenging for learners of Japanese language to acquire
due to their complex grammatical formulas. Textbooks tend to assume that the explanation
of grammatical rules and drill exercises focusing on the rules are sufficient for learners to be
competent in JH. However, functional issues related to honorifics such as how to use
honorifics in socioculturally appropriate ways or how to deal with non-linguistic aspects of
honorifics are likely to be ignored.
The present study questioned the assumptions entailed in the traditional formoriented
approach to teaching language, and examined an oral interview activity carried out
by 24 students in a Japanese language course at a Canadian university. In this activity, the
students interviewed Japanese professors using JH, and several types of data (i.e., the
researcher observations and interviews with the participants and student written reflections
on the interviews) were analyzed in order to find out students' practice (i.e., what students
did) of and theory (i.e., how students perceived) about JH and oral interviews.
The findings of the study present a very complex picture of students' practice and
theory; they were engaged not only in the formation of the rules of JH but also in the
functional areas such as non-verbal behaviour and conversation management. The data also
revealed that students were very much concerned with functional areas during the
interviews. From these findings, the study emphasizes the importance offunctions embedded
in JH, and suggests that the Japanese teacher help learners acquire the functional competence
dealing with JH as well as the linguistic competence.
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Learners’ practice and theory about Japanese honorifics : an oral interview activity with native speakersOde, Maki 11 1900 (has links)
Japanese honorifics (JH) are challenging for learners of Japanese language to acquire
due to their complex grammatical formulas. Textbooks tend to assume that the explanation
of grammatical rules and drill exercises focusing on the rules are sufficient for learners to be
competent in JH. However, functional issues related to honorifics such as how to use
honorifics in socioculturally appropriate ways or how to deal with non-linguistic aspects of
honorifics are likely to be ignored.
The present study questioned the assumptions entailed in the traditional formoriented
approach to teaching language, and examined an oral interview activity carried out
by 24 students in a Japanese language course at a Canadian university. In this activity, the
students interviewed Japanese professors using JH, and several types of data (i.e., the
researcher observations and interviews with the participants and student written reflections
on the interviews) were analyzed in order to find out students' practice (i.e., what students
did) of and theory (i.e., how students perceived) about JH and oral interviews.
The findings of the study present a very complex picture of students' practice and
theory; they were engaged not only in the formation of the rules of JH but also in the
functional areas such as non-verbal behaviour and conversation management. The data also
revealed that students were very much concerned with functional areas during the
interviews. From these findings, the study emphasizes the importance offunctions embedded
in JH, and suggests that the Japanese teacher help learners acquire the functional competence
dealing with JH as well as the linguistic competence. / Education, Faculty of / Language and Literacy Education (LLED), Department of / Graduate
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Comprehending utterances in Japanese as a first and a second language: literality and conventionalityHagiwara, Akiko January 2005 (has links)
Mode of access: World Wide Web. / Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 173-177). / Electronic reproduction. / Also available by subscription via World Wide Web / xiv, 177 leaves, bound 29 cm
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Grammaire comparée du français et du japonais parlés : phrase et sujetFukuda, Suzy E. January 1996 (has links)
The object of this thesis is to present a comprehensive analysis of the phrase structure and the properties of the subject in spoken French and Japanese. Consulting histories, grammars, and a corpus of transcribed speech from each language, a comparative examination of the oral codes of both languages is conducted, which highlights not only the significant distinctions between the two but also the similarities. These distinctions are not just the result of structural differences between the two languages, but are more that of a distinct classification of our experiences. By pointing out the distinguishing characteristics of the oral codes of the two languages, this study attempts to bring us to a better understanding of the two languages and equally of the cultures from which they are inseparable.
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Grammaire comparée du français et du japonais parlés : phrase et sujetFukuda, Suzy E. January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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