Added by: aresye | Karma: 28.05 | Black Hole | 26 June 2010
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Language in the Brain
This book should be serious reading for anyone interested in a comprehensive understanding of language, in which evolution, functional organisation and hierarchies are explained by reference to brain architecture and dynamics.
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It covers a wide range of non-technical vocabulary required for university level and above and is ideal for all international students whose first language is not English.
As an experienced student of English, you know the language can be a tricky one to learn thanks to its complex verb forms, like irregular verbs. Written by ESL guru Mark Lester--author of Grammar and Usage in the Classroom--this authoritative reference unravels the mystery of this verb form so you can take your English-language skills to the next level.
In Thought and Language, Vygotsky (1962) outlined how thought and language are independent and develop separately, but with similar processes. Word meaning is the smallest unit of thought and speech. Vygotsky also offers pointers for instructional technologists.
This is the first ever volume to compile sociolinguistic and historical information on lesser-known, and relatively ignored, native varieties of English around the world. Exploring areas as diverse as the Pacific, South America, the South Atlantic and West Africa, it shows how these varieties are as much part of the big picture as major varieties and that their analysis is essential for addressing some truly important issues in linguistic theory, such as dialect obsolescence and death, language birth, dialect typology and genetic classification, patterns of diffusion and transplantation and contact-induced language change.