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1
Consequences of evidential marking on the interpretation of subjective predicates: Experimental data from Korean ...
Lee, Sarah Hye-Yeon; Kaiser, Elsi. - : Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung, 2021
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2
Does hitting the window break it?: Investigating effects of discourse-level and verb-level information in guiding object state representations ...
Lee, Sarah Hye-yeon; Kaiser, Elsi. - : Taylor & Francis, 2021
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3
Does hitting the window break it?: Investigating effects of discourse-level and verb-level information in guiding object state representations ...
Lee, Sarah Hye-yeon; Kaiser, Elsi. - : Taylor & Francis, 2021
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4
Consequences of evidential marking on the interpretation of subjective predicates: Experimental data from Korean
In: Sinn und Bedeutung; Bd. 25 (2021): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 25; 545-562 ; Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung; Vol 25 (2021): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 25; 545-562 ; 2629-6055 (2021)
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5
Semantic decomposition of verbs and the comprehension and production of result states
In: CLS 55, 2019 : proceedings of the fifty-fifth annual meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society (2020), S. 247-257
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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6
The Interpretation of the Comparison Class in Superlative and Comparative Predication
In: CLS 55, 2019 : proceedings of the fifty-fifth annual meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society (2020), S. 233-246
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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7
Lexical Retention in Contact Grammaticalisation: Already in Southeast Asian Englishes
Ziegeler, Debra; Lee, Sarah. - : Brill Academic Publishers, 2020
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8
Cantonese tone production in pre-school Urdu–Cantonese bilingual minority children ...
Yao, Yao; Chan, Angel; Fung, Roxana. - : SAGE Journals, 2019
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9
Cantonese tone production in pre-school Urdu–Cantonese bilingual minority children ...
Yao, Yao; Chan, Angel; Fung, Roxana. - : SAGE Journals, 2019
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10
Supplementary_material – Supplemental material for Cantonese tone production in pre-school Urdu–Cantonese bilingual minority children ...
Yao, Yao; Chan, Angel; Fung, Roxana. - : SAGE Journals, 2019
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11
Supplementary_material – Supplemental material for Cantonese tone production in pre-school Urdu–Cantonese bilingual minority children ...
Yao, Yao; Chan, Angel; Fung, Roxana. - : SAGE Journals, 2019
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12
"Writing makes us professional" : second language writing in Argentinian teacher education
Nieva, Cristina; Herrera, Marianela; Doroñuk, Luisina. - : Multilingual Matters, 2019
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13
Reconceptualizing Aunty as an address term in urban multilingual Malaysia
Shanmuganathan, Thilagavathi; Lee, Sarah. - : Wiley-Blackwell, 2019
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14
An Interactional Account of Multilingual Usage Patterns in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia - a High Contact Area
Lee, Sarah. - 2015
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15
Lisa Lim, Anne Pakir and Lionel Wee, eds. 2010. English in Singapore. Modernity and Management
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 35 (2014) 1, 99-103
OLC Linguistik
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16
Spanish language maintenance and shift among the Chilean community in Auckland
Lee, Sarah Elsie. - : Auckland University of Technology, 2013
Abstract: Language often plays a significant role in a migrant’s sense of cultural identity and, more broadly, the cultural identity of migrant communities is deeply affected by issues of language maintenance and shift. Existing New Zealand literature in the field includes studies of migrant communities from Europe, Asia and the Pacific (Starks, 2005) but there are still sizeable migrant communities whose language needs have yet to be investigated. This thesis addresses the situation of one migrant group by investigating Spanish language maintenance and shift among the Auckland Chilean community, the most established of the Latin American communities in New Zealand. It investigates the attitude of the community to language maintenance and shift, the importance of language to its cultural identity and if and how the language is being maintained. An ethnographic approach provided a rich narrative which allowed the community’s experience of language maintenance and shift to be shared from its perspective (Dörnyei, 2007). The fourteen participants were Chilean migrants who had arrived in New Zealand as either adults or children and were sourced through snowball sampling. Their ages ranged from early twenties to late sixties and, at the time of the interviews, their length of residence in New Zealand varied from several years through to almost forty years. Qualitative interview data was supplemented and verified through observation of language use at community events (Talmy, 2010) while community records provided background information on the community. This study shows that the Chilean community greatly values its language with each of the participants identifying the Spanish language as being core to their identity. Surprisingly, this included participants who did not believe that it was absolutely necessary to pass the language on to their children. The high status of the language within wider New Zealand society, which is enhanced by the popularity of the children’s television programme Dora the Explorer, plays an important role in supporting the community’s cultural identity and providing an impetus for participants to pass the language on to their children. However, there are many challenges to intergenerational language transmission which need to be addressed if language shift is to be avoided. An increase in mixed marriages, in particular, means that increased institutional support is imperative if children are to acquire a parental community language. The economic, academic and cognitive advantages that bilingualism can offer also need to be brought to the attention of community members so that they can make educated language choices for their children. This research is particularly timely given the growing population of Spanish speakers in New Zealand, and also the recent launch by the Royal Society of New Zealand (2013) of the issues paper Languages in Aotearoa New Zealand which urges action in the area of maintenance of community languages. It is hoped that this thesis will act as a tool for the community, allowing them to better assess the state of the language and providing them with recommendations that might aid them in language maintenance efforts.
Keyword: Bilingualism; Chilean; Ethnography; Language maintenance; Language shift; Spanish
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10292/5555
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17
Cue Integration in the Perception of Korean Fricatives
In: Lee, Sarah. (2013). Cue Integration in the Perception of Korean Fricatives. UC Berkeley Phonology Lab Annual Reports, 9(9). Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/1171p08v (2013)
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18
A metonymic analysis of Singaporean and Malaysian English causative constructions
In: Metonymy and metaphor in grammar (Amsterdam, 2009), p. 291-322
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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19
Causativity reduction in Singaporean English
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 27 (2006) 3, 265
OLC Linguistik
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20
Causativity reduction in Singaporean English
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 27 (2006) 3, 265-294
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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