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Hits 101 – 120 of 12.573

101
Grammatical Gender Effects on Cross-linguistic Categorization ...
Sams, Christopher D.. - : Zenodo, 2020
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102
НОВЫЕ ПОДХОДЫ К ТИПОЛОГИИ ТЕРРИТОРИАЛЬНЫХ ВАРИАНТОВ ФРАНЦУЗСКОГО ЯЗЫКА ... : NEW APPROACHES TO THE TYPOLOGY OF TERRITORIAL VARIANTS OF THE FRENCH LANGUAGE ...
О.И. Дагбаева; Е.Г. Дмитриева; З.А. Усманова. - : Мир науки, культуры, образования, 2020
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103
ПРИНИЦИПЫ КОГНИТИВНОГО МОДЕЛИРОВАНИЯ В ОБУЧЕНИИ ЯЗЫКУ ... : THE PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE MODELING IN LANGUAGE TEACHING ...
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104
The expression of speaker and nonspeaker surprise in South Conchucos Quechua
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105
Das Französische als exotische Sprache
Haase, Martin. - : Otto-Friedrich-Universität, 2020. : Bamberg, 2020
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106
Das Französische als exotische Sprache
Haase, Martin. - : Narr, 2020. : Tübingen, 2020
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107
Inductive Bias and Modular Design for Sample-Efficient Neural Language Learning
Ponti, Edoardo. - : University of Cambridge, 2020. : St Johns, 2020
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108
Overcoming Word-Centrism: Towards a New Foundation for the Philosophy of Language ; Преодолевая словоцентризм: на пути к новым основаниям философии языка
Boroday, Sergey Yu.; Бородай, С.Ю.. - : Сибирский федеральный университет. Siberian Federal University, 2020
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109
Kinship and affinity in Indo-European
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110
Das Pronomen "sich" an der Schnittstelle von Reflexivität und Reziprozität
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111
Syntaktische Interferenzerscheinungen in mündlichem Deutsch als Fremdsprache
Kogler, Stefan. - 2020
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112
Natural explanations for the history of word-final dental fricatives in English
Nitsche, Ines. - 2020
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113
Kontrastive Linguistik als Mikrotypologie: Die Rolle des Deutschen als L3
Livio Gaeta. - : Peter Lang, 2020. : country:DEU, 2020. : place:Berlin, 2020
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114
Investigating differential case marking in Sümi, a language of Nagaland, using language documentation and experimental methods
Teo, Amos. - : University of Oregon, 2020
Abstract: One goal in linguistics is to model how speakers use natural language to convey different kinds of information. In theories of grammar, two kinds of information: “who is doing what (and to whom)”, the technical term for which is case or case role; and pragmatic information about “what is important”, have been assumed to be expressed by different means within a language. However, linguists have recently discovered that in numerous languages spoken in Australia, New Guinea, and South Asia, there are noun suffixes or enclitics that appear to simultaneously provide both case and pragmatic information. The existence of such systems suggests that our current theories of grammar need to be modified, though it is unclear how as we still know little about how these grammatical systems work. In this project, I looked at Sumi, a Tibeto-Burman language of North-east India, which has such a system of case marking. In this system, speakers do not consistently mark the subject of a transitive or intransitive sentence with an enclitic that conveys case information, but their choice depends on additional semantic and pragmatic factors. This was the first study of a Tibeto-Burman language to use a combination of new quantitative corpus methods with traditional linguistic fieldwork methods, including the recording, transcription, and tagging of spoken language, to identify semantic and pragmatic factors that are relevant to speakers’ choice of noun enclitic. In this study, some factors found to be relevant were: whether the sentence had a direct object or not; the animacy of the subject; and whether it was the first mention of a subject in connected speech or not. This was also the first study of a language with such a case system to include a perception study that investigated if intonation was used by native listeners to disambiguate whether a noun suffix was conveying either case or pragmatic information. This study showed that listeners were not using differences in intonation, but rather relied on the type of sentence the suffix occurred in to determine its meaning.
Keyword: endangered languages; language documentation; linguistic typology; phonetics; Tibeto-Burman languages; tone
URL: https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/xmlui/handle/1794/25264
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115
Comparability and measurement in typological science: The bright future for linguistics
Round, Erich R.; Corbett, Greville G.. - : De Gruyter Mouton, 2020
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116
Semantic Categories of Artifacts and Animals Reflect Efficient Coding
In: Proceedings of the Society for Computation in Linguistics (2020)
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117
Kalunga in the lusophone context: A phylogenetic study
In: Journal of Portuguese Linguistics, Vol 19, Iss 1 (2020) (2020)
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118
Kalunga in the lusophone context: A phylogenetic study
In: Journal of Portuguese Linguistics, Vol 19, Iss 1 (2020) (2020)
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119
Contextual Conditions and Constraints in Chinese Dangling Topics
In: Acta Linguistica Asiatica, Vol 10, Iss 2 (2020) (2020)
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120
Manner Verb Construction and Reduplication of Kedang Language: A Typological Study *
In: PAROLE: Journal of Linguistics and Education; Vol 10, No 2 (2020): Volume 10 Number 2 October 2020; 110-123 ; 23380683 ; 2087-345X (2020)
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