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41
A Study on Instructional Humor: How Much Humor Is Used in Presentations?
In: Behavioral Sciences; Volume 12; Issue 1; Pages: 7 (2021)
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42
Language and Reasoning by Entropy Fractals
In: Signals ; Volume 2 ; Issue 4 ; Pages 44-770 (2021)
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43
Quantifying Paradigm Shape in Spanish Verbs
LeFevre, Grace. - : The Ohio State University, 2021
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44
Lexica corpus ...
Hewett, Freya; Stede, Manfred. - : Zenodo, 2021
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45
Competition, selection and communicative need in language change: an investigation using corpora, computational modelling and experimentation ...
Karjus, Andres. - : The University of Edinburgh, 2021
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46
Proceedings of ULAB 2021 ...
Wiernik, Lydia. - : Zenodo, 2021
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47
Proceedings of ULAB 2021 ...
Wiernik, Lydia. - : Zenodo, 2021
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48
Sentiment Analysis for Latin: a Journey from Seneca to Thomas Aquinas ...
Sprugnoli, Rachele. - : Zenodo, 2021
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49
Sentiment Analysis for Latin: a Journey from Seneca to Thomas Aquinas ...
Sprugnoli, Rachele. - : Zenodo, 2021
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50
Natural Language Processing for Corpus Linguistics ...
Dunn, Jonathan. - : Code Ocean, 2021
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51
Reference Corpus of Early New High German (1350–1650) ...
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52
Reference Corpus of Early New High German (1350–1650) ...
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53
Reference Corpus of Early New High German (1350–1650) ...
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54
Reference Corpus of Early New High German (1350–1650) ...
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55
Reference Corpus of Early New High German (1350–1650) ...
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56
‘Minds’ in ‘Homer’: A quantitative psycholinguistic comparison of the Iliad and Odyssey ...
Dedović, Boban. - : Digital Repository at the University of Maryland, 2021
Abstract: DOMINVM SAPIENTIAE SOLVM LAVDABO ... : “My child, why do you weep? What grief has come upon your phrenes (φρένες)? Speak—conceal not in noos (νόος) in order that we both may know,” so speaks Achilles’ mother Thetis as the fierce warrior weeps tears of wrath on the beaches of Troy (Il. 1.362-363). To be sure, noos likely translates as mind in English in the above passage. However, Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey include a total of eight such words that may be rendered as mind, heart, or spirit: noos (νόος), thymos (θυμός), psykhe (ψυχή), phrenes (φρένες), prapides (πρᾰπῐ́δες), kardia (κᾰρδῐ́ᾱ), kradie (κρᾰδῐ́η), ker (κῆρ), and etor (ἦτορ). This complicated situation with Greek translations of mind is at the heart of this study’s empirical investigation. To wit, what is mind in the Il. compared to the Od.? The present investigation sought to quantify and compare the use of mental language in the Homeric epics by means of computational linguistics. Prior scholarly investigations have been mostly qualitative; the few quantitative studies conducted utilized ...
Keyword: computational linguistics; Homer; Iliad; mental language; mind; Odyssey; psycholinguistics
URL: https://drum.lib.umd.edu/handle/1903/26950
https://dx.doi.org/10.13016/9hwb-kvrx
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57
Controlled Multilingual Thesauri for Kazakh Industry-Specific Terms
In: Social Inclusion ; 9 ; 1 ; 35-44 ; Social Inclusion and Multilingualism: The Impact of Linguistic Justice, Economy of Language and Language Policy (2021)
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58
Using sentiment analysis in tourism research: A systematic, bibliometric, and integrative review
In: Journal of Tourism, Heritage & Services Marketing ; 7 ; 2 ; 16-27 (2021)
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59
Hy-NLI : a Hybrid system for state-of-the-art Natural Language Inference
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60
Analysis of an Extracted Discipline-Specific Computer Science Vocabulary List
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