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Niemieckie zaniechania ; The German minority leadership's resignations from securing this monority's cultural and linguistic rights in postcommunist Poland
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Niemieckie zaniechania : dyskusyjo ; The German minority leadership's resignations from securing this monority's cultural and linguistic rights in postcommunist Polanda discussion
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Yiddish, or Jewish German? : the Holocaust, the Goethe-Institut and Germany’s neglected obligation to peace and the common cultural heritage
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Managing data for integrated speech corpus analysis in SPeech Across Dialects of English (SPADE)
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Signalling Language Choice in Anglo-Saxon and Frankish Charters, c.700–c.900
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The Languages of Early Medieval Charters: Latin, Germanic Vernaculars, and the Written Word
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Structured heterogeneity in Scottish stops over the 20th Century
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Toward “English” phonetics: variability in the pre-consonantal voicing effect across English dialects and speakers
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The migration of Old English to Scotland: place-name evidence for early Northumbrian settlement in Berwickshire
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Hough, Carole. - : Forum for Research on the Languages of Scotland and Ulster, 2020
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Heavens, what a sound! The acoustics and articulation of Swedish Viby-i
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The History of Negation in the Languages of Europe and the Mediterranean. Volume II: Patterns and Processes
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From London to Leipzig and back: (Post-)Punk, ‘Endzeit’ and Gothic in the GDR
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Two personal names in recently found Anglo-Saxon runic inscriptions: Sedgeford (Norfolk) and Elsted (West Sussex)
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Practical Runic Literacy in the Late Anglo-Saxon Period: Inscriptions on lead sheet
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Abstract:
The corpus of runic inscriptions from Anglo-Saxon England is growing steadily, and the evidence they provide sheds valuable new light on the range and role of literacy in this culture as well as on early forms of the Old English language and its dialects. Few of these inscriptions can be disparaged as mere graffiti, and it is in fact clear that there is a significant patterning in the types of text written in runes in successive phases within the more than six centuries of the Anglo-Saxon Period. Three principal historical stages can now be identified. Pre-Old English and Early Old English phases that cover the fifth century AD to the ninth can be defined on linguistic grounds; concurrently, quite distinctive forms and uses of text are associated with each of these phases. The present paper identifies a ‘Late Anglo-Saxon’ phase, defined in terms of runographic practice and historical and archaeological context rather than linguistic criteria, although interestingly runic inscriptions of Latin text are prominent in this set. The phase is represented particularly by a number of recently found inscriptions on pieces of sheet lead. The examples which now allow to define this group are published here, most of them for the first time. The material has a predominantly ecclesiastical and learned character, and yet it represents a mode of literacy quite distinct from the familiar contemporary manuscript culture.
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Keyword:
CC Archaeology; CN Inscriptions. Epigraphy; PD Germanic languages; PE English
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URL: http://orca.cf.ac.uk/116849/
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Grammatical aspect and L2 learners’ on-line processing of temporarily ambiguous sentences in English: A self-paced reading study with German, Dutch and French L2 learners
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Information packaging in speech shapes information packaging in gesture : the role of speech planning units in the coordination of speech-gesture production
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‘Er ist unser’: The Public Appropriation of Franz Grillparzer (1871/1891)
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Qualitative and quantitative aspects of phonetic variation in Dutch eigenlijk
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How gesture and speech interact during production and comprehension
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Theory and practice in the coining and transmission of place-names: a study of the Norse and Gaelic anthropo-toponyms of Lewis
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