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Skip to Search Results- 1Carter, Barbara
- 1Harada, Keisuke
- 1Isaka, Yukiko
- 1Masuda, Takahiko
- 1Miyaguchi, Tetsuya
- 1Moroz, Ashley J
- 11Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 11Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of/Theses and Dissertations
- 1Secondary Education, Department of
- 1Secondary Education, Department of/Master of Education: Secondary Education Final Projects
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Fall 2009
Spoken and written data were analysed to examine the use of first person pronouns (1PP) in Japanese by non-native speakers (NNS), and then compared to 1PP use by native speakers (NS). For English NS who are used to obligatory subjects in their L1, Japanese 1PP poses challenges since Japanese 1PP...
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Using plain forms but still being polite: speech style shifting as an interactional phenomenon in Japanese native and non-native talk
DownloadFall 2010
The Japanese language is known for its various styles of speech, conditioned by factors such as social status, formality, and gender. When a speaker switches between the speech styles within the same talk targeted at the same recipient, such a phenomenon is called speech style shifting...
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Spring 2017
In the Japanese language, it is known that when the evidential -soo da ‘looks like’ connects to a negative predicate, an additional element sa occasionally appears between the negative marker and -soo da, giving rise to two different forms, -na-soo da and -nasa-soo da. An example is shown below: ...