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The puzzling nuanced status of who free relative clauses in English: a follow-up to Patterson and Caponigro (2015)
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In: ENGLISH LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS, vol 26, iss 1 (2022)
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Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Nature of Religion - Irfan Ajvazi ...
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Finding the best way to put media bias research into practice via an annotation app ...
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Semantics and interpretation of the response particles ano ‘yes’ and ne ‘no’ ...
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Experiment 2: Jury Suggestibility: The Effect of Judicial Instruction on Juror’s use of Covert Recording Transcripts ...
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Are neural language models sensitive to false belief? A computational study. ...
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Neural correlates and subjective assessments of multimodal training on perception of foreign language prosody ...
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Effect of singular 'they' on the meanings of weak and strong crossover sentences ...
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Leibniz Dream: Children's comprehension of conjunctive expressions in Hungarian ...
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Use of referential expressions in a communicative set-up ...
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Potential of automatic speech processing technologies for early detection of oral language disorders: a meta-analytic review ...
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Orthographical relationships between figures and characters ...
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Abstract:
The purpose of this study is to examine orthographically symbolic relationships between written Japanese names and figures (orthographic bouba-kiki effects). Cuskley et al. (2017) reported that native English speakers judge that names including curved alphabets are appropriate as names of curved figures, while names including angular alphabets are appropriate as names of spiky figures. In this study, we investigate that native Japanese speakers judge whether presented written names are appropriate as names of curved or spiky figures by using names written with curved characters (Hiragana names) and names written with angular characters (Katakana names). Therefore, we hypothesize that we can identify orthographic bouba-kiki effects in Japanese by examining connections between figures drown with straight or curved lines and names written with Hiragana or Katakana characters. First, we predicted that participants evaluate hiragana names as names of curved figures more appropriate than those of straight figures. ...
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Keyword:
FOS Languages and literature; FOS Psychology; Linguistics; Psychology; Social and Behavioral Sciences
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URL: https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/2kxse https://osf.io/2kxse/
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Investigating the Folk Concept of Pain: Implication & Projection ...
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