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Hits 121 – 140 of 4.891

121
Reliable Estimates of Interpretable Cue Effects with Active Learning in Psycholinguistic Research
In: Proceedings of Interspeech 2021 / Heřmanský, Hynek; Černocký, Honza (Hrsg.). - Baixas, France : ISCA, 2021. - S. 1743-1747 (2021)
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122
Function Words at the Interface : A Two-Tier Approach
In: Languages ; 6 (2021), 4. - 197. - MDPI. - eISSN 2226-471X (2021)
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123
Expressive insubordination : A cross-linguistic study on that-exclamatives
In: Expressive Meaning Across Linguistic Levels and Frameworks / Trotzke, Andreas; Villalba, Xavier (Hrsg.). - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2021. - S. 108-120. - ISBN 978-0-19-887121-7 (2021)
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124
An English and Turkish dictionary: in two parts, English and Turkish and Turkish and English
Redhouse, James W.. - : Philipps-Universität Marburg, 2021
In: Drucke 19. Jh. (2021)
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125
The syntax and semantics of Swedish copular sentences : a comparative perspective
In: The Journal of Comparative Germanic Linguistics ; 24 (2021), 1. - S. 49-88. - Springer. - ISSN 1383-4924. - eISSN 1572-8552 (2021)
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126
The prefix *si- in Western Indonesian, Sulawesi, and Philippine languages
Kitada, Yuko. - 2021
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127
Morphosyntaxe du kunoofaay (jóola de Mlomp Nord), langue atlantique du Sénégal
Sambou, Anne Mireille Therese. - : University of Cologne, 2021
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128
Guided “LegislEUlab” on the Drafting of Multilingual Legal Provisions in the EU: Concept of the Cologne Summer School for European Legal Linguistics
Mattissen, Johanna; Dillmann, Ruben. - : Universität zu Köln, Europäische Rechtslinguistik, 2021
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129
Translation of the Polish “Slavistic Phonetic Alphabet” (AS) (Polska pisownia fonetyczna, Slawistyczny alfabet fonetyczny, Alfabet slawistyczny) into the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA)
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130
Bitte Recht verständlich! Evaluation der Gesetzesredaktion des Bundes bei der Verständlichkeitsoptimierung von Rechtsvorschriften
Vogel, Friedemann; Schmallenbach, Joline. - : Europäische Rechtslinguistik, 2021
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131
Ideologies about the Serbo-Croatian language: Separateness vs. togetherness
Bunčić, Daniel. - : University Press, 2021
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132
De Nagel or de Spijker op de Kop? A Lexical Contrast between Belgian Dutch and Netherlandic Dutch.
Marynissen, Ann. - : De Gruyter/Mouton, 2021
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133
The Linguistics of Olfaction. Typological and Diachronic Approaches to Synchronic Diversity
Staniewski, Przemysław; Jędrzejowski, Łukasz. - : John Benjamins, 2021
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134
The role of alternatives in language
Repp, Sophie; Spalek, Katharina. - : Frontiers Media, 2021
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135
Erzählfähigkeit und mögliche Einflussfaktoren bei Kindern und Jugendlichen mit Down-Syndrom
Neitzel, Isabel. - 2021
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136
Introduction to the Yali – English – German dictionary with a short grammatical sketch
Riesberg, Sonja. - : Asia-Pacific Linguistics, 2021
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137
Commentary: The autosegmental-metrical model of intonational phonology
Grice, Martine. - : The MIT Press, 2021
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138
The alignment of agent-first preferences with visual event representations in German vs. Arabic speakers
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139
Kannywood and the Cultural and Linguistic Contestations on Hausa Films
Ibrahim, Muhsin. - : KUPS, 2021
Abstract: Kannywood, an emerging Hausa film industry in northern Nigeria, struggles with several issues, some bordering on religion, culture and language. This study explores how Kannywood filmmakers conform to some exacting religio-cultural demands and language ideologies that favour particular interpretations of the Islamicate state and a section of the audience. Unlike similar works, which are still few, the research engages the filmmakers, the hegemonic religious and cultural stakeholders, and, significantly, the audience for reactions and answers. Thus, it deploys Audience Reception Theory, the Encoding/Decoding Model, and the Language and Economic Model as theoretical tools and uses empirical field research methods. Using primarily three films as examples with reference to other related films and events, we discovered that internally, Kannywood filmmakers are grappling with some cultural and religious views and projecting and promoting certain linguistic identities. Researchers in the film industry often overlook language; Hausa is one of the largest African languages, with speakers of the different dialects across various countries numbering millions. However, we found that Kannywood prefers a single variety, the Kano one. This preference leads to the peripheralisation of the Sokoto sub-regional dialect and commodification of the non-ethnic Hausa ‘broken’ variety of the language. We also discovered that Muslims, the dominant religious group in Kano, are not monolithic, courtesy of several, often conflicting, doctrinal differences and multiple interpretations of Islamic religious texts. Thus, it is challenging to satisfy all its faithful-cum-audiences. Lastly, we found that Hausa culture is also plural, hybrid and heterogeneous due, primarily, to social mobility and the rising impact and effect of globalisation. Therefore, there is no end to the incongruities in Kannywood films, nor to the contestations about them.
Keyword: ddc:290; ddc:300; ddc:400; ddc:490
URL: https://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/53910/
https://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/53910/1/Final_Dissertation_Muhsin_Ibrahim.pdf
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140
Use of sign space - experimental perspectives
Perniss, Pamela. - : Routledge, 2021
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