Type of verbal mistake Garrett (1975) represents four features of tongue slip. The first is that there is an exchange between linguistic units of the same position. For example, fragments of the initial language are replaced with fragments of another initial language. The same generalization also applies to the intermediate language part and the final language part. In addition, the slip is displayed in the same speech unit. This means that consonants are replaced by consonants and vowels, and vowels are replaced by vowels.
Tongue slip, which causes grammatical errors during speech, is called conversion error. The conversion error is a psychological operation proposed by Chomsky in the conversion hypothesis and there are three parts that can cause performance errors. These transformations are applied to the level of the underlying structure and predict how the error will occur. This example from Fromkin (1980) shows that the rule is erroneously analyzing the temporal marker and that the inverse transformation of subject support is misapplied. Topic - inversion of a particle is erroneously analyzed by its structure When a verb moves to the position of C, the verb is not a tense. This causes "do-support" to occur, resulting in grammatical errors due to lack of tension in verbs
Type of verbal mistake Garrett (1975) represents four features of tongue slip. The first is that there is an exchange between linguistic units of the same position. For example, fragments of the initial language are replaced with fragments of another initial language. The same generalization also applies to the intermediate language part and the final language part. In addition, slides are displayed in similar speech units.
Modern cognitive psychology provides more convincing evidence for the occurrence of tongue slip. First of all, slipping of the tongue may occur due to strong habit invasion (plain formation). "There are expressions of older, more sophisticated, more unusual styles that are often removed from human cultural heritage and replaced with a more general form" (). This basically means that people erroneously slide their tongue for their customs. Thus, some of the tongue slides may simply be because people are used to expressing words in other ways. For example, many people accidentally quote the Shakespeare topic "All that is not gold" because "everything that shines is not gold". "Brilliance" is more familiar than "gloss", so you can switch to more general things in less common situations. Therefore it is not prudent to suggest that all slipping of the tongue is in Sloyd.