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1
Perceptual categorization of handling handshapes in British Sign Language
In: Language and Cognition , 8 (4) pp. 501-532. (2016) (2016)
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2
Regional Sign Language Varieties in Contact: Investigating Patterns of Accommodation
In: JOURNAL OF DEAF STUDIES AND DEAF EDUCATION , 21 (1) pp. 70-82. (2016) (2016)
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3
Using conversational data to determine lexical frequency in British Sign Language: The influence of text type
In: LINGUA , 143 pp. 187-202. (2014) (2014)
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4
Lexical variation and change in British Sign Language
In: PLoS One , 9 (4) , Article e94053. (2014) (2014)
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5
Lexical variation and change in british sign language.
In: In: PLoS One. (pp. e94053 - ?). (2014) (2014)
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6
Directionality in British Sign Language is not obligatory: The importance of corpus data when considering “agreement”
In: Presented at: 88th Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America. (2014) (2014)
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7
Framing constructed action in British Sign Language narratives
In: JOURNAL OF PRAGMATICS , 55 119 - 139. (2013) (2013)
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8
Predicate structures, gesture, and simultaneity in the representation of action in British Sign Language: evidence from deaf children and adults.
In: J Deaf Stud Deaf Educ , 18 (3) 370 - 390. (2013) (2013)
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9
Building the British Sign Language Corpus
In: Language Documentation and Conservation , 7 pp. 136-154. (2013) (2013)
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10
Lexicalisation in British Sign language: Implications for phonological theory
In: Presented at: Paper to be presented at Theoretical Issues in Sign Language Research 11. (2013) (2013)
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11
Variation in handshape and orientation in British Sign Language: The case of the '1' hand configuration
In: Language & Communication , 33 (1) 69 - 91. (2013) (2013)
Abstract: This paper investigates phonological variation in British Sign Language (BSL) signs produced with a ‘1’ hand configuration in citation form. Multivariate analyses of 2084 tokens reveals that handshape variation in these signs is constrained by linguistic factors (e.g., the preceding and following phonological environment, grammatical category, indexicality, lexical frequency). The only significant social factor was region. For the subset of signs where orientation was also investigated, only grammatical function was important (the surrounding phonological environment and social factors were not significant). The implications for an understanding of pointing signs in signed languages are discussed.
Keyword: Phonology; Pointing; Sign language; Sociolinguistic variation
URL: http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1358300/1/1358300.pdf
http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1358300/
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12
Sociolinguistic typology and sign languages
In: Presented at: Paper to be presented at the 7th International Conference on Language Variation in Europe (ICLaVE). (2013) (2013)
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13
Sign languages and sociolinguistic typology
In: Presented at: 44th Australian Linguistic Society Annual Conference. (2013) (2013)
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14
Describing sociolinguistic variation in verb directionality in British Sign Language: A corpus-based study
In: UNSPECIFIED, British Library, London. (2013) (2013)
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15
Point of view in British Sign Language and spoken English narrative discourse: the example of ‘The Tortoise and the Hare’
In: Language and Cognition , 5 (4) 313 - 343. (2013) (2013)
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16
Sign languages and sociolinguistic typology
In: Presented at: Language Variation and Change in Australia Conference. (2013) (2013)
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17
Pronouns and pointing in sign languages
In: LINGUA , 137 230 - 247. (2013) (2013)
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18
The importance of language documentation and corpora for sign languages
In: UNSPECIFIED, SOAS. (2013) (2013)
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19
Identifying and comparing semantic relations across signed and spoken languages
In: Presented at: Paper to be presented at Theoretical Issues in Sign Language Research 11. (2013) (2013)
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20
From corpus to lexical database to online dictionary: Issues in annotation of the BSL Corpus and the development of BSL SignBank
In: In: Crasborn, O and Efthimiou, E and Fotinea, E and Hanke, T and Kristoffersen, J and Mesch, J, (eds.) (Proceedings) 5th Workshop on the representation and processing of sign languages: Interactions between corpus and lexicon [workshop part of 8th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation, LREC 2012. (pp. pp. 7-12). ELRA: Paris. (2012) (2012)
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