Her underlying assumption is that knowledge of letter-sound relationships is prerequisite for constructing meaning from written materials.
Architecture is an art of constructing meaning, among other things.
It is of course possible to use language in a premeditated and reflective way consciously to construct meaning.
In addition, they are part of the process of constructing meaning for participants and opposers (Snow & Benford, 1988).
Humans becoming informed (constructing meaning) via intermediation between inquirers and instrumented records.
In initiative style-shifting speakers actively engage in social practices to construct social meaning.
Savery (1994) contends that the more structured the learning environment, the harder it is for the learners to construct meaning based on their conceptual understandings.
The ways in which languages use sounds or signs to construct meaning are studied in phonology.
In any given language, only a limited number of the many distinct sounds that can be created by the human vocal apparatus contribute to constructing meaning.
A learner must have sufficient semantic data at hand in order to be able to construct meaning.