4,391 to 4,400 of 4,832 Results
Sep 1, 2016 -
K-SPAN (Korean Surface Phones and Neighborhoods)
Adobe PDF - 721.0 KB -
MD5: 2bf63cc0704a2fe3b4c40445192af77f
documentation for the K-SPAN database |
Sep 1, 2016 -
K-SPAN (Korean Surface Phones and Neighborhoods)
Python Source Code - 4.5 KB -
MD5: a87dffdad6725b500a187e1168859149
Script to merge K-SPAN with the NIKL corpus (see documentation) |
Jul 2, 2016
Chromý, Jan, 2016, "Data from the project Sociolinguistic analysis of the use of prothetic /v/ in Czech", https://doi.org/10.18710/AGL9FD, DataverseNO, V1
Data from the project Sociolinguistic analysis of the use of prothetic /v/ in Czech. Altogether, 28 893 tokens of words which may contain prothetic v- taken from sociolinguistic interviews with 159 speakers from five Czech cities (Prague, Brno, České Budějovice, Plzeň and Hradec Králové). The speakers are either from younger (20 to 30 years) or old... |
Plain Text - 5.6 MB -
MD5: f1fdf4f8e54a752b9c49f9c57dc8b354
Data set from the project Sociolinguistic analysis of the use of prothetic /v/ in Czech. |
Plain Text - 6.1 KB -
MD5: 79b412139b6008a61b9495d901971300
Description for each variable in the dataset. |
Apr 25, 2016
Pepper, Steve, 2016, "Replication data for: Windmills, Nizaa and the typology of binominal compounds", https://doi.org/10.18710/MP1JF6, DataverseNO, V1
This data set consists of 500+ nominal compounds from the African language Nizaa (sgi; Niger-Congo, Cameroon). It is based on an unpublished word list collected by Rolf Theil ( genannt Endresen) of the University of Oslo in the 1980s. Each compound and its constituents are glossed and annotated for word class, and 201 transparent noun-noun compound... |
Plain Text - 66.3 KB -
MD5: 9e421ee0c4c69f7b89fdbeca76fa22b8
Data set in UTF-8, tab-delimited format |
Unknown - 94.1 KB -
MD5: 307d28a9549d5728cbfda3c17d7c8f93
Data set in Excel 2016 format |
Adobe PDF - 236.4 KB -
MD5: 15d95a93cb9c888f652062dd99f7fe52
Column descriptions |
Apr 13, 2016
Janda, Laura A.; Antonsen, Lene, 2016, "Replication data for: The ongoing eclipse of possessive suffixes in North Saami: A case study in reduction of morphological complexity", https://doi.org/10.18710/4XTXMH, DataverseNO, V2
North Saami is replacing the use of possessive suffixes on nouns with a morphologically simpler analytic construction. Our data (>2K examples culled from >.5M words) track this change through three generations and parameters of semantics, syntax, and geography. Intense contact pressure on this minority language probably promotes morphological simpl... |
