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Samarin defines glossolalia, or speaking-in-tongues, as a "meaningless but phonologically structured human utterance believed by the speaker to be a real language but bearing no systematic resemblance to any natural language, living or dead". Motley, in his 1981 article, "A Linguistic analysis of glossolalia: evidence of unique psycholinguistic processing", claims that his examples of glossolalia are, in a number of ways, language-like yet unlike the first language (L1) of the speaker. This paper examines que question: to what extent are Motley's findings atypical of glossolalia?
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