430 Germanische Sprachen; Deutsch
Refine
Year of publication
- 2020 (94) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (63)
- Review (15)
- Part of Periodical (12)
- Doctoral Thesis (3)
- Report (1)
Language
- German (66)
- Turkish (12)
- Portuguese (7)
- Multiple languages (6)
- English (3)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (94)
Keywords
- Deutsch (41)
- Linguistik (15)
- Germanistik (12)
- Fremdsprache (11)
- Fremdsprachenunterricht (10)
- Literaturwissenschaft (8)
- Didaktik (6)
- Fachsprache (6)
- Übersetzung (6)
- German as a foreign language (5)
Institute
Werbungen sind als Gegenstand der Alltagskultur anzusehen, die uns im Fernsehen, Radio oder Internet begegnen. Sie können auch FremdsprachenlernerInnen ermöglichen, die alltägliche Sprache in die Lehrveranstaltung mit hineinzubauen. Diese Studie versucht bezüglich eines Unterrichtsbeispiels zum Thema "Schöne bunte Welt der Werbung" in Lektion 2 "Alles neu!" im Lehrwerk "Netzwerk B1-1" (Dengler et al., 2013) Meinungen zum Einsatz von Werbungen in der Lehrerbildung darzustellen. Die Studie wurde 2017/2018 an der Abteilung für Deutschlehrerausbildung der Bursa Uludağ Universität in der Lehrveranstaltung "Schreibfertigkeit I" mit 33 FremdsprachenlernerInnen durchgeführt. Ein Fragebogen versucht festzustellen, wie sie über Werbungen und ihre Umsetzung in Lehrveranstaltungen denken. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass sie Werbungen in der Lehrerbildung als einen Weg zum Lernen neuer Informationen eingestuft haben.
Theoretical accounts agree that German restrictive relative clauses (RCs) are integrated at the level of syntax as well as at the level of prosody (; , ; ; ; ) in both the default verb-final and the marked verb-second variant (referred to as iV2). Both variants are assumed to show the same prosodic pattern, i. e., prosodic integration into the main clause, and not unintegrated prosody, which would signal a sequence of two main clauses. To date strong empirical evidence for this close correspondence between prosody and syntax in RCs is missing. Findings regarding prosodic integration of verb-final RCs are not consistent, and research regarding the prosody of iV2 structures is very scarce. Using a delayed sentence-repetition task, our study investigated whether subordination is signaled by prosody in RCs in both the verb-final and the V2 variant in adults (n = 21). In addition, we asked whether young language learners (n = 23), who at the age of 3 have just started to produce embedded clauses, are already sensitive to this mapping. The adult responses showed significantly more patterns of prosodic integration than of prosodic non-integration in the V-final and the iV2 structures, with no difference between the two conditions. Notably, the child responses mirrored this adult behavior, showing significantly more patterns of prosodic integration than of prosodic non-integration in both V-final and iV2 structures. The findings regarding adults’ prosodic realizations provide novel empirical evidence for the claim that iV2 structures, just like verb-final RCs, show prosodic integration. Moreover, our study strongly suggests that subordination is signaled by prosody already by age 3 in both verb-final and V2 variants of RCs.
The study presented in this article investigates the resources of legal terminology used in an important legal document written by the Olomouc court scribe Jindřich Polan. The first part of the study describes the development of German legal terminology in four stages, from the compilation of the 'Sachsenspiegel' until the beginning of the 19th century. The second part deals with the characteristics of German legal terms in Polan's regulations, and the third part discusses the use of legal terminology of Latin origin in the same document. Polan's approach to Latin loanwords is also analyzed - especially his approach to their semanticization, which is intended to simplify users' understanding of the text and the morphology of loanwords.
Phraseolexemes and sentence-like phraseologisms taken from the novel 'Windlichter des Todes. Roman aus Siam' (1933) prove that Alma M. Karlin is rightly known as a linguistically creative author. It can be shown that Karlin often uses patterns of occasionalisms (modifications and neologisms) to support the aesthetic and artistic value of the novel.