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1
Condition C reconstruction, clausal ellipsis and island repair [<Journal>]
Yoshida, Masaya [Verfasser]; Potter, David [Verfasser]; Hunter, Tim [Verfasser]
DNB Subject Category Language
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2
Neuro-Linguistic Programming for Change Leaders
Potter, David. - : Routledge, 2018
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3
A two-source hypothesis for Gapping [<Journal>]
Potter, David [Verfasser]; Frazier, Michael [Sonstige]; Yoshida, Masaya [Sonstige]
DNB Subject Category Language
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4
Equative and Predicational Copulas in Thai
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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5
A Sibling Precedence Approach to the Linearization of Multiple Dominance Structures
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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6
Remarks on “Gapping” in DP
In: Linguistic inquiry. - Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Pr. 43 (2012) 3, 475-494
OLC Linguistik
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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
In: Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society; BLS 36: General Session and Special and Parasessions; 144-157 ; 2377-1666 ; 0363-2946 (2010)
BASE
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9
A Sibling Precedence Approach to the Linearization of Multiple Dominance Structures
In: Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society; BLS 36: General Session and Special and Parasessions; 307-321 ; 2377-1666 ; 0363-2946 (2010)
BASE
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10
Memory and leadership in the Late Roman Republic.
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11
The Roman past in the age of the Severans: Cassius Dio, Philostratus and Herodian.
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12
Social memory in 4 th -century Athenian public discourse.
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13
The art of command: The Roman army general and his troops, 135BC--138AD.
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14
Framing the past: The roots of Greek chronography.
Abstract: Organising the events of human history around a fixed chronological framework has long been a staple of Western historiography, but it is by no means a universal method of viewing the past. Many societies have survived without such a perspective, including Greece before the rise of historiography in the fifth century BC. A study of developments in Greek chronography during this century can therefore allow a basic ingredient of modern historical thought to be examined in its formative stages. The only tool at the Greeks' disposal for measuring long periods of time was the diachronic list, a chronologically ordered list of the names of (for instance) kings, magistrates, athletic victors or members of an aristocratic family. These lists enabled the contours of the past to be plotted exactly for the first time. The dissertation therefore begins by surveying examples attested in the sources before 400 BC and by exploring their uses, not all of which are strictly chronographic. Subsequent chapters seek to illuminate this evidence by placing it in its appropriate intellectual context. Chapter 2 examines traditions of list-making prior to the fifth century, suggesting through close readings of catalogue and theogonic poems that lists already supplied one influential model for organised displays of knowledge. Chapter 3, drawing on theoretical research into the influence of literacy, examines the role of writing in the construction of diachronic lists and argues that chronography must be understood as a thoroughly literate enterprise. Its development marks a significant extension of writing into the process of remembering the past and a step away from characteristically oral patterns of commemoration. The final chapter relates the growing fifth-century concern with time-reckoning to other intellectual currents of the day, in particular the increasing interest in measurement, quantification and accuracy which can be detected in other fields of study. Chronography, which reaches a high level of sophistication in the Hellenistic period and beyond, has its roots, it is suggested, in this wider attempt to map the human world with ever increasing degrees of precision. ; 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/2027.42/132698/2/9977273.pdf
Keyword: Chronography; Framing; Greek; Historiography; Past; Roots
URL: https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/132698
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:9977273
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15
Homicide, wounding, and battery in the fourth-century Attic orators.
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16
Conditor anni: Ovid's Fasti and the poetics of the Julio-Claudian calendar.
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17
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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18
Persian nomos and paranomia in Herodotus.
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19
Rudis Locutor: Speech and Self-Fashioning in Apuleius' Metamorphoses.
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