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Equative and Predicational Copulas in Thai
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In: Hedberg, Nancy; & Potter, David. (2016). Equative and Predicational Copulas in Thai. Proceedings of the 36th Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, 36(36), 144 - 157. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/51v906p7 (2016)
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A Sibling Precedence Approach to the Linearization of Multiple Dominance Structures
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In: Potter, David. (2016). A Sibling Precedence Approach to the Linearization of Multiple Dominance Structures. Proceedings of the 36th Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, 36(36), 307 - 321. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/7nd772f1 (2016)
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7 |
A multiple dominance analysis of sharing coordination constructions using tree adjoining grammar
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8 |
Equative and Predicational Copulas in Thai
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In: Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society; BLS 36: General Session and Special and Parasessions; 144-157 ; 2377-1666 ; 0363-2946 (2010)
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A Sibling Precedence Approach to the Linearization of Multiple Dominance Structures
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In: Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society; BLS 36: General Session and Special and Parasessions; 307-321 ; 2377-1666 ; 0363-2946 (2010)
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The Roman past in the age of the Severans: Cassius Dio, Philostratus and Herodian.
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The art of command: The Roman army general and his troops, 135BC--138AD.
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Homicide, wounding, and battery in the fourth-century Attic orators.
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Conditor anni: Ovid's Fasti and the poetics of the Julio-Claudian calendar.
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Abstract:
Ovid's Fasti must be understood as participating in both the Callimachean tradition of learned poetry and the Augustan and later Tiberian negotiations of a new order for Rome and its empire. The poem presents the Roman calendar as a tool for building this order and engages as much with calendrical modes of organizing the world as with poetic ones. In the Fasti, both Ovid and the political calendar-builders (Romulus, Numa, Caesar and Augustus) act as conditores anni, as Ovid equates the foundation of the calendar with poetic composition, and particularly with the composition of the Fasti. In addition, the poem's didactic structure, mimetic of the year's progress, allows the graphic conventions of the epigraphical calendars to interact with our expectations of unity, continuity and discontinuity in poetic composition. This interaction, in combination with the poem's representation of the calendar as both an ideological tool and a literary composition, help Ovid build a poetic model by which to explore and interpret the ways in which the calendar organizes the experience of the Roman year, asking its readers to build meanings among the various rites and commemorations it includes. The final chapters of the dissertation test and explore the expectations raised by this poetic model of the year through a study of Book 4's representation of the relationship between the rites of April, organized by the portrait of Venus in the proem, and a discussion of Ovid's treatment of the new Julio-Claudian festivals. Many of the poetic connections the Fasti draws between old and new rites, as well as among the new dynastic holidays are encouraged, but not dictated, by the calendrical structure, skillfully put to ideological use by Augustus and his heir. ; Ph.D. ; Ancient history ; Classical literature ; Language, Literature and Linguistics ; Social Sciences ; University of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies ; http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/131069/2/9825319.pdf
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Keyword:
Anni; Calendar; Claudian; Conditor; Fasti; Julio; Ovid; Poetics; Roman Empire
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URL: https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/131069 http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:dissertation&res_dat=xri:pqm&rft_dat=xri:pqdiss:9825319
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The nature of the Roman monarchy in the late first/early second centuries A.D.: The reigns of Nerva and Trajan to the acquisition of Arabia.
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Rudis Locutor: Speech and Self-Fashioning in Apuleius' Metamorphoses.
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