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EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT TYPES OF AUDITORY INPUT ON INCIDENTAL VOCABULARY LEARNING BY L2 JAPANESE SPEAKERS ...
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84 |
The effect of genre-based instruction on academic speech ...
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85 |
Focus on Friendship or Fights for Civil Rights? Teaching the Difficult History of Japanese American Incarceration through The Bracelet
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In: Education Publications (2020)
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86 |
“Invisibility is not a natural state for anyone”: (Re)constructing narratives of Japanese American incarceration in elementary classrooms
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In: Education Publications (2020)
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87 |
Refusal Expression in L2 and its Comparison with Native Speaker: A Study Case in the Japanese Language
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In: JURNAL ARBITRER; Vol 7, No 1 (2020); 34-44 ; 2550-1011 ; 2339-1162 (2020)
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88 |
Deixis and Mind-Style in Japanese–English Literary Translation: Translating Kashimada Maki’s “Meido Meguri” and “Kyū-jū-kyū no Seppun” ...
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89 |
Conceptions of Human Dignity and their Impacts on hES Cell Research Regulation in France and Japan ...
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90 |
AGENTIVE ADVERBIALS IN JAPANESE ... : АГЕНТИВНЫЕ АДВЕРБИАЛЫ В ЯПОНСКОМ ЯЗЫКЕ ...
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Projected self: the de se across dimensions and beyond pronouns ...
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Abstract:
This dissertation is about how attitudes de se are encoded in content outside the assertive domain, as well as by expressions which are not really pronouns, such as nouns. First of all, it provides evidence that expressives are necessarily de se, which means that non-pronominal expressions, such as nouns, verbs etc. can be de se in a non-assertive dimension. Next, it examines in full detail the landscape of expressive (or as it is more recently known, use-conditional) meaning and the extant dedicated frameworks, arguing that they are misguided, due to conceptual issues and not being restrictive enough to be theoretically meaningful. I then move to the debate of whether expressives are presuppositions or a distinct kind of meaning, arguing for a conciliatory solution which proposes that expressives are ordinary presuppositions endowed with a compositionally irrelevant, indexical kind of meaning which I call ‘associative’. This solution explains the ambivalent behaviour of expressives, i.e. that they may ... : PhD funded by the Leverhulme Foundation (Grant ID/Ref: RPG-2014-017) ...
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Keyword:
1st person pronoun; conventional implicature; de se; expressive meaning; expressives; first person; indexicality; indexicals; Japanese; names; pragmatics; presupposition; self; self-reference; semantics; use-conditional meaning
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URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/297452 https://dx.doi.org/10.17863/cam.44513
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95 |
ディケンズの『クリスマス・キャロル』を読む ; A Practical Report : The Reading of A Christmas Carol
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96 |
The Innateness of Human Language: Viewing from Grammatical Errors of Second Language Learners
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97 |
A story to tell… How to integrate the three Modes of Communication through a story time program in French
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In: The Coastal Review: An Online Peer-reviewed Journal (2020)
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98 |
Child Naming Practice and Changing Trends in Modern Japan
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In: The Coastal Review: An Online Peer-reviewed Journal (2020)
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