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Hits 41 – 58 of 58

41
"You've got to sort of eh hoy the Geordie out": modals of obligation and necessity in fifty years of Tyneside English
In: English language and linguistics. - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press 19 (2015) 2, 355-381
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42
De modificador aspectual a atenuador oracional : nuevos datos sobre la evolución de "medio"
In: Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie. - Berlin [u.a.] : de Gruyter 131 (2015) 1, 119-156
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43
"do"-support in early New Zealand and Australian English
In: Grammatical change in English world-wide. - Amsterdam ˜[u.a.]œ : Benjamins (2015), 65-86
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44
Asynchronous grammaticalization : V1-conditionals in present-day English and German
In: Languages in contrast. - Amsterdam : Benjamins 15 (2015) 1, 34-64
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45
The use of the "-free" compound and "free of" and "free from" phrasal constructions: a diachronic and synchronic study
In: Journal of English linguistics. - Thousand Oaks, Calif. [u.a.] : Sage 43 (2015) 3, 201-226
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46
A corpus-based approach to the genre and diachronic distributions of English absolute clauses
In: Journal of quantitative linguistics. - London : Routledge 22 (2015) 3, 250-272
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47
The reduced definite article "th'" in late Middle English and beyond: an insight from the definiteness cycle
In: Journal of Germanic linguistics. - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press 27 (2015) 2, 105-144
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48
Análise corporal do gerúndio em português : = Corpus analysis of the gerund in the Portuguese
In: Etudes romanes de Brno. - Brno [u.a.] : Masarykova Univerzita 36 (2015) 2, 267-284
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49
Grammatischer Wandel im (Mittel-)Neuhochdeutschen - von oben und von unten : Perspektiven einer historischen Soziolinguistik des Deutschen
In: Zeitschrift für germanistische Linguistik. - Berlin [u.a.] : de Gruyter 43 (2015) 3, 387-420
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50
"en", "dans", "dedans" prépositions au XVIe siècle: approche statistique et combinatoire
In: Le Français moderne. - Paris : CILF 83 (2015) 2, 230-247
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51
Third person reference in late Latin : demonstratives, definite articles and personal pronouns in fourth century Latin
Hertzenberg, Mari Johanne Bordal. - Berlin [u.a.] : de Gruyter Mouton, 2015
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52
Constraints on ellipsis alternation: a view from the history of English
In: Language variation and change. - New York, NY : Cambridge Univ. Press 27 (2015) 2, 227-254
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53
Korpuslinguistische Studien zur mittelniederdeutschen Syntax
In: Jahrbuch für germanistische Sprachgeschichte. - Berlin : de Gruyter 6 (2015), 249-275
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54
Gauging convergence on the ground: code-switching in the community
In: International journal of bilingualism. - London [u.a.] : Sage Publ. 19 (2015) 4, 365-386
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55
Pseudotitles in Bahamian English: a case of Americanization?
In: Journal of English linguistics. - Thousand Oaks, Calif. [u.a.] : Sage 43 (2015) 2, 143-167
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56
Neologia i gramàtica: entre el neologisme lèxic i el neologisme sintàctic ; Neology and Grammar: between lexical neologism and syntactic neologism
In: Caplletra. Revista Internacional de Filologia.; Caplletra 59 (Tardor 2015); 137-157 ; Caplletra. Revista Internacional de Filologia; Caplletra 59 (Tardor 2015); 137-157 ; 2386-7159 ; 0214-8188 (2015)
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57
Kia Māori te reo Māori? An investigation of adult learner attitudes towards the impact of English on te reo Māori.
Tawhara, Te Ao Mārama. - : University of Otago, 2015
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58
Aspects of change in the syntax of Māori - A corpus-based study
Kelly, Karena. - : Victoria University of Wellington, 2015
Abstract: In the current climate of Māori language revitalisation, there is ample anecdotal evidence to suggest that not only the vocabulary, but also the syntax of modern Māori is markedly different from its traditional roots, and that it shows significant influence from English syntax. However, syntactic change in Māori has not hitherto been rigorously studied. This thesis aims to provide material evidence of change in Māori syntax, through a corpus-based study of grammatical change in te reo Māori over the period of contact with English. My methodology involved the compilation and comparison of two synchronic corpora representing the two ends of the contact period to provide a diachronic perspective on the language. Each corpus consists of approximately 102,000 running words of material written originally in Māori. The early corpus contains items published pre-1900. The modern material was written post-1990. The thesis is not only an exploration of the possibility of documenting syntactic change through the use of such corpora, but also tests whether it is possible to do this using corpora significantly smaller than the multi-million word corpora typical in corpus linguistics. The scope of this methodology is tested by examining three distinct types of grammatical features: a grammatical particle (the preposition mō), a pair of semantically related lexemes that appear to be undergoing a process of grammaticalisation (the verbs taea and āhei), and a widespread grammatical construction (certain types of relative clauses). In each instance, the two corpora are compared for features such as the frequency of occurrence, the associated constructions, and the contexts of use. In relation to the methodological questions, the thesis concludes that while these corpora are too small to provide adequate data on individual lexical items like taea and āhei, the methodology did make it possible to document change in the other, relatively high-frequency grammatical features. The thesis also raises the questions of whether the changes identified result from the direct adoption of English usages and constructions, whether they result from insufficient exposure to traditional Māori as a result of the dominance of English, or whether they are perhaps instead the result of internally-motivated Māori language evolution. This leads to a discussion of the likely implications of the changes documented here for the future of the language and the language community. I argue that acceptance of all such change as natural and unavoidable is likely to be detrimental to the future of te reo Māori.
Keyword: Corpus; Language change; Linguistics; Māori; Syntactic change; Te reo; Wetereo
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10063/4841
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