4,741 to 4,750 of 4,759 Results
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: V-temporal adverbials in Slavic
Plain Text - 2.9 KB -
MD5: 3eff738341c6b7f07b5143cf75ce9971
R script used for the analysis: Principle Components |
Jun 16, 2014
Berdicevskis, Aleksandrs, 2014, "Replication data for: Introducing pressure for expressivity into language evolution experiments", https://doi.org/10.18710/TJUSQA, DataverseNO, V1
48 secondary school students participated in the experiment, all native speakers of Russian, mean age 15.4 years. Participants were rewarded with candies for successful rounds (see below). Participants were asked to learn an "alien" language and to communicate in it in pairs. Dur... |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: Introducing pressure for expressivity into language evolution experiments
Plain Text - 39.0 KB -
MD5: 38fbf5130df26e48f64d153591f8a069
Results of a language evolution experiment |
Jun 16, 2014
Fábregas, Antonio, 2014, "Spanish deverbal adjectives (1): ivo", https://doi.org/10.18710/GSI6B4, DataverseNO, V2
Attested adjectives in -ivo in contemporary Spanish, with information about their bases, their semantic interpretation and their morphological properties. |
Jun 16, 2014
Berdicevskis, Aleksandrs; Zvereva, Vera, 2014, "Replication data for: Slangs go online, or the rise and fall of the Olbanian language", https://doi.org/10.18710/2NKJPG, DataverseNO, V1
All the data were taken from the website udaff.com (the center of the padonki culture and one of the cradles of the Olbanian language), from the section kreativy ('creative stories') where users upload their own short stories. This is one of the oldest and most important sections... |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: Slangs go online, or the rise and fall of the Olbanian language
Plain Text - 22.8 KB -
MD5: 4a1bb6a85ed1769a6c7085102e55fcd9
Results of a diachronic study of a Russian internet slang |
Jun 16, 2014
Makarova, Anastasia, 2014, "Russian -n'ki words", https://doi.org/10.18710/TBWFYV, DataverseNO, V1
The database includes Russian words ending in -n'ki of the bain'ki 'sleep' type |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Russian -n'ki words
Unknown - 98.1 KB -
MD5: 251b536b88e543cf93ee8514ce908839
Russian words ending in -n'ki (the bain'ki 'sleep' type) |
Jun 13, 2014
Janda, Laura A., 2014, "Metonymy in Word-Formation: Russian, Czech, and Norwegian", https://doi.org/10.18710/1GNZSC, DataverseNO, V1
Publication abstract: A foundational goal of cognitive linguistics is to explain linguistic phenomena in terms of general cognitive strategies rather than postulating an autonomous language module (Langacker 1987: 12-13). Metonymy is identified among the imaginative capacities of... |
Jun 13, 2014 -
Metonymy in Word-Formation: Russian, Czech, and Norwegian
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 282.5 KB -
MD5: b3abaf47f0d2709306156a28f7298e72
Charts based on the data in the databases. R=Russian, C=Czech, N=Norwegian, P&G refers to the study by Peirsman and Geeraerts 2006 cited in the article. met des = metonymy designation (how many metonymy patterns a suffix has) |