搜索结果: 1-15 共查到“普通语言学 I-Languages”相关记录47条 . 查询时间(0.187 秒)
Review article: Clause Structure and Adjuncts in Austronesian Languages
Clause Structure Austronesian Languages
2015/9/7
Just as teenagers divide the world into jocks, nerds, goths, preps, townies, posers, and so
on, linguists tend to categorize languages in broad strokes by what is best known about
them: Bantu langua...
We discuss the phenomenon of closest conjunct agreement with a special focus
on head-final languages; we present data from two such languages, Hindi and
Tsez, which allow agreement with the rightm...
Annotated bibliography of research in heritage languages
Heritage languages early bilinguals
2015/9/6
Heritage languages are spoken by early bilinguals, simultaneous or sequential, whose L1
(home language) is severely restricted because of insufficient input. As a result, they can
understand the hom...
Coreference and antecedent representation across languages
languages antecedent representation
2015/9/2
Previous studies have shown that speakers of languages such as German, Spanish
and French reactivate the syntactic gender of the antecedent of a pronoun in order to
license gender agreement. As sy...
THE PHONETIC REALIZATION OF SINGLETON-GEMINATE CONTRASTS IN THREE LANGUAGES OF INDONESIA
PHONETIC REALIZATION SINGLETON-GEMINATE CONTRASTS THREE LANGUAGES INDONESIA
2015/8/7
This paper examines the timing properties of singletongeminate contrasts in three Austronesian languages of Indonesia: Buginese, Madurese and Toba Batak. This study details the hitherto poorly describ...
Clitics in South Slavic Languages:The View from the Interfaces
South Slavic Languages View from the Interfaces
2015/8/7
This paper analyses the placement of clitics that occupy the so-called "second" position inSerbian, in which both the first word or the first constituent can serve as host positions for clitics. In bo...
Associate Professor Monika Greenleaf,Department of Slavic Languages and Literature at Stanford University(图)
Associate Professor Monika Greenleaf Department of Slavic Languages and Literature at Stanford University
2015/7/3
Associate Professor Monika Greenleaf,Department of Slavic Languages and Literature at Stanford University,This course is an in-depth engagement with a range of Dostoevsky's genres: early works (episto...
Word meanings across languages support efficient communication
Word meanings languages communication
2015/6/24
Why do languages have the semantic categories they do? Each language partitions human experience into a system of semantic categories, labeled by words or morphemes, which are used to communicate abou...
Analyzing Variation in Creole Languages.
Ellipsis in wh-in-situ languages:deriving apparent sluicing in Hindi-Urdu and Uzbek
wh-in-situ Hindi-Urdu Uzbek sluicing ellipsis PF copular clause wh-movement
2015/6/15
Wh-in-situ languages have a special role to play in investigating the relation between the wh-syntax of a language and the availability of sluicing-like constructions (slcs). Van Craenenbroeck and Lip...
Alignment of two languages: The spreading of mouthings in Sign Language of the Netherlands
Sign Language of the Netherlands NGT mouthing prosody corpus linguistics bimodalism
2015/5/13
Mouthings and mouth gestures are omnipresent in Sign Language of the Netherlands (NGT).Mouthings in NGT are mouth actions that have their origin in spoken Dutch, and are usually time aligned with the ...
Formats for other-initiation of repair across languages
typology conversation repair pragmatics pragmatic typology
2015/5/5
In conversation, people regularly deal with problems of speaking, hearing, and understanding. We report on a cross-linguistic investigation of the conversational structure of other-initiated repair (a...
Spatial terms across languages support near-optimal communication: Evidence from Peruvian Amazonia, and computational analyses
Spatial terms semantic universals informative communication language and thought semantic maps
2015/4/27
Why do languages have the categories they do? It has been argued that spatial terms in the world’s languages reflect categories that support highly informative communication, and that this accounts fo...
Compensation for vocal tract characteristics across native and non-native languages
vocal tract characteristics across native non-native languages
2015/4/27
Perceptual compensation for speaker vocal tract properties was investigated in four groups of listeners: native speakers of English and native speakers of Dutch, native speakers of Spanish with low pr...