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  2. Active listening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_listening

    Active listening includes further understanding and closeness between the listener and speaker. The more basic ways this is done are through paraphrasing, reflective emotion, and open-ended questions. Paraphrasing involves putting the speaker's message in one's words to demonstrate one's understanding and continue the discussion.

  3. Linguistic competence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_competence

    The semantic theory of humour is designed to model the native speaker's intuition with regard to humor or, in other words, his humor competence. The theory models and thus defines the concept of funniness and is formulated for an ideal speaker-hearer community i.e. for people whose senses of humor are exactly identical.

  4. Linguistic performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_performance

    When learning a second language or with children acquiring their first language, speakers usually have this knowledge before they are able to produce them. [28] Their speech is usually slow and deliberate, using phrases they have already mastered, and with practice their skills increase.

  5. Paraphrase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paraphrase

    A paraphrase can be introduced with verbum dicendi—a declaratory expression to signal the transition to the paraphrase. For example, in "The author states 'The signal was red,' that is, the train was not allowed to proceed," the that is signals the paraphrase that follows. A paraphrase does not need to accompany a direct quotation. [20]

  6. Quizlet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quizlet

    Also in 2016, Quizlet launched "Quizlet Live", a real-time online matching game where teams compete to answer all 12 questions correctly without an incorrect answer along the way. [15] In 2017, Quizlet created a premium offering called "Quizlet Go" (later renamed "Quizlet Plus"), with additional features available for paid subscribers.

  7. Speech act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_act

    For much of the history of the positivist philosophy of language, language was viewed primarily as a way of making factual assertions, and the other uses of language tended to be ignored, as Austin states at the beginning of Lecture 1, "It was for too long the assumption of philosophers that the business of a 'statement' can only be to 'describe' some state of affairs, or to 'state some fact ...

  8. HuffPost Data

    projects.huffingtonpost.com

    Poison Profits. A HuffPost / WNYC investigation into lead contamination in New York City

  9. Communication accommodation theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communication...

    As predicted by the inter-group distinctiveness theory, native speakers might also choose to refrain from engaging in FT or might use divergence, whenever they wish to maintain group distinctiveness, either because they have a lower perception of the other group, they feel threatened by them, or they wish to display ethnocentricity.