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Hits 21 – 40 of 140

21
A unified standard orthography for Nguni languages : South Africa, Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Tanzania, Malawi and Zambia
Malambe, Gloria. - Cape Town : CASAS, 2013
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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22
Les conséquences de la francophonie dans la pratique et l'enseignement de la traduction juridique
In: Lebende Sprachen. - Berlin : de Gruyter 58 (2013) 1, 235-254
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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23
Languages at war : external language spread policies in Lusophone Africa ; Mozambique and Guinea-Bissau at the turn of the 21st century
Figueira, Carla. - Frankfurt am Main ; Berlin ; Bern ; Wien [u.a.] : Lang, 2013
IDS Mannheim
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24
Readings in African dialectology and applied linguistics
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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25
African Arabic : approaches to dialectology
Banti, Giorgio; Taine-Cheikh, Catherine; Behnstedt, Peter. - Berlin [u.a.] : De Gruyter Mouton, 2013
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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26
Current multilingualism : a new linguistic dispensation
Singleton, David M. (Hrsg.); Fishman, Joshua A. (Hrsg.); Ó Laoire, Muiris (Hrsg.). - Boston [u.a.] : De Gruyter Mouton, 2013
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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27
Language conflict in Algeria : from colonialism to post-independence
Benrabah, Mohamed. - Bristol [u.a.] : Multilingual Matters, 2013
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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28
Sociologie et sociolinguistique des francophonies israéliennes
Ben Refaʾel, Eliʿezer; Ben-Refaʾel, Miryam. - Frankfurt, M. : PL Acad. Research, 2013
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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29
Language policy and identity construction : the dynamics of Cameroon's multilingualism
Anchimbe, Eric A.. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins, 2013
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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30
Gender and language in sub-saharan Africa : tradition, struggle and change
Sunderland, Jane (Hrsg.); Lem Atanga, Lilian (Hrsg.); Ellece, Sibonile (Hrsg.). - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins, 2013, 2013
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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31
Variation and change
In: The Oxford handbook of sociolinguistics. - Oxford [u.a.] : Oxford Univ. Press (2013), 484-502
BLLDB
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32
Colloquial features in World Englishes
In: International journal of corpus linguistics. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 18 (2013) 4, 479-505
BLLDB
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33
Zones créolophones, Afrique et lexicographie différentielle. - La variation du français dans les espaces créolophones et francophones : [en hommage à Sarah Leroy] ; 2 : Zones créolophones, Afrique et lexicographie différentielle. -
Ledegen, Gudrun; Leroy, Sarah (Gefeierter). - Paris : L'Harmattan, 2013
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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34
Repertoires and choices in African languages
Storch, Anne; Lüpke, Friederike. - Boston [u.a.] : de Gruyter, 2013
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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35
Readings in African dialectology and applied linguistics
Fábùnmi, Felix Abídèmí (Hrsg.). - München : LINCOM Europa, 2013
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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36
Northeast African Semitic : lexical comparisons and analysis
Hudson, Grover. - Wiesbaden : Harrassowitz, 2013
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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37
Repertoires and choices in African languages
Lüpke, Friederike; Storch, Anne. - Boston ; Berlin : de Gruyter, 2013
DNB Subject Category Language
IDS Mannheim
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38
The influence of habitats on female mobility in Central and Western Africa inferred from human mitochondrial variation
BASE
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39
Language Attitudes of University of Cape Town Linguistics Students towards Codeswitching
Schilling, Michael S.. - : College of William and Mary, 2013
Abstract: The purpose of this study is to determine the attitudes of Linguistics students and professors at the University of Cape Town (UCT) in South Africa towards codeswitching, specifically English-Afrikaans and English-Xhosa. The study also addresses how these attitudes vary in relation to the participants' attitudes towards Xhosa, English, Afrikaans, and/or other varieties that they speak, and how these attitudes relate to the linguistic landscape of the University of Cape Town campus and surrounding area. The study's importance lays in its focus on attitudes towards the phenomenon of codeswitching. It will augment the existing literature and be used as a comparison with other, similar studies, such as Ramsay-Brijball's (2004) studies on Zulu L1 students' language attitudes at the University of Durban and Gibbons's (1983) matched-guise study of Hong Kong students' attitudes towards codeswitching. Each of these studies show on some level that the participants' attitudes towards codeswitching portray a compromise of their attitudes towards the varieties involved. Student participants' attitudes were elicited primarily through a matched guise technique, during which they responded to audio clips from South African feature films using a questionnaire comprising 18 semantic differential scales; clips containing speech in English, Afrikaans, and Xhosa, and using English-Afrikaans and English-Xhosa codeswitching will be included. The questionnaire was designed to indirectly elicit the participants' attitudes, while subsequent sociolinguistic interviews were held to more directly elicit those attitudes (Garrett, 2010) and the ideologies informing them. Similar interviews were conducted with various professors and post-graduates at the University of Cape Town in order to investigate how their attitudes vary with those of the undergraduate students. Furthermore, a supplemental questionnaire asked students to rate their intrinsic and extrinsic attitudes towards the language varieties in question and collected information such as the student's gender, level of study, language varieties spoken at home, and language varieties spoken with friends, so that variation in the attitudes could be analyzed according to these factors. Finally, photographs were taken across campus of language in use in signs, posters, and advertisements to obtain a portrait of the linguistic landscape of the University of Cape Town. Triangulation of data from these mixed methods provided a much fuller picture of the language attitudes of undergraduates at UCT.
Keyword: Afrikaans; Codeswitching; Grounded Theory Analysis; Language Attitudes; Matched Guise Technique; Principal Components Analysis; Sociolinguistics; South Africa; Xhosa
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10288/18173
BASE
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40
Y Nut, a Phonetic-based Learning System for Spoken Languages
In: Proceedings of the Fifth International IEEE EAI Conference on e‐infrastructure and e‐Services for Developing Countries (AFRICOMM 2012) ; Fifth International IEEE EAI Conference on e‐infrastructure and e‐Services for Developing Countries (AFRICOMM 2013) ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00994247 ; Fifth International IEEE EAI Conference on e‐infrastructure and e‐Services for Developing Countries (AFRICOMM 2013), Nov 2013, Blantyre, Malawi. pp.20-23 (2013)
BASE
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