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1
Replication Data for: Ethno-Linguistic Diversity and Urban Agglomeration ...
Eberle, Ulrich J.; Henderson, J. Vernon; Rohner, Dominic. - : Harvard Dataverse, 2020
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2
Australia Loves Language Puzzles: The Australian Computational and Linguistics Olympiad (OzCLO)
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3
Measurement of the muon reconstruction performance of the ATLAS detector using 2011 and 2012 LHC proton-proton collision data.
In: Symplectic Elements at Oxford ; Europe PubMed Central ; PubMed (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/) ; Web of Science (Lite) (http://apps.webofknowledge.com/summary.do) ; Scopus (http://www.scopus.com/home.url) ; CrossRef (2014)
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4
Understanding Japanese culture through a semantic analysis of kawaii 'cute', itai 'pitiful' and ita-kawaii 'pitifully trying to be cute'
Asano-Cavanagh, Yuko. - : Australian Linguistic Society, 2013
Abstract: This paper examines three Japanese words kawaii 'cute', itai 'pitiful' and ita-kawaii 'pitifully trying to be cute'. Japanese women frequently say kawaii to show positive feelings towards objects or people. However, too much kawai is considered undesirable. A compound word, ita-kawaii, is used to describe women who dress or wear make-up in an overly kawaii way. Especially when older women try to loek kawaii, they are criticised as itai, or ita-kawaii. From a linguistic perspective, kawaii, itai, and ita-kawaii are not lexicalised in other languages. Although the kawaii phenomenon has been thoroughly discussed by many scholars, there has been no rigorous semantic analysis for the three words. In this study, the framework of the Natural Semantic Metalanguage approach was applied to explicate the exact meaning of kawaii, itai, and ita-kawaii. The corpus was information about the paraphernalia provided for Japanese women who are between school age and middle age. The analysis indicates that the meaning of ita and ita-kawaii is related to the social norm which criticises someone for being conceited. The kawaii and ita-kawaii syndrome reveals a Japanese cultural characteristic which enforces people not to be out of place in society.
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/38136
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5
Thinking outside the brain: Spatial indices to visual and linguistic Information.
In: In: Henderson, J and Ferreira, F, (eds.) Interfacing Language, Vision, and Action. (pp. 161-190). CA: Academic Press: San Diego. (2004) (2004)
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6
Exploiting Diversity for Natural Language Parsing
Henderson, J C. - : Johns Hopkins Univ., 2000
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7
A Preliminary Analysis of Lebanese Arabic Intonation
Chahal, Dana. - : Australian Linguistics Society, 2000
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8
Visual attention and saccadic eye movements in complex visual tasks
In: Behavioral and brain sciences. - New York, NY [u.a.] : Cambridge Univ. Press 16 (1993) 3, 579
OLC Linguistik
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9
Work, culture and the dialectics of proletarian habituation
Henderson , J. W.; Cohen, Robin. - : Leicester University, 1980
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10
The perception of an oral-nasal continuum generated by articulatory synthesis
In: Speech research. - New Haven, Conn. : Haskins Laboratories (1979) 57, 17-38
BLLDB
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11
Points from letters: Errant suffix
Henderson, J M. - : BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 1978
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12
Points from letters: Errant suffix
Henderson, J M. - 1978
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13
Yeletnye, the language of Rossel Island
Henderson, J. E.. - : Australian National University, 1975
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