4,711 to 4,720 of 4,741 Results
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 16, 2014
Makarova, Anastasia, 2014, "Russian -n'kat' verbs", https://doi.org/10.18710/MJDL3F, DataverseNO, V1
The database includes Russian -n'kat' verbs attested in the Russian National Corpus (see http://ruscorpora.ru). |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Russian -n'kat' verbs
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 433.5 KB -
MD5: 8b87e1b71299c51fa7421a189b9a9219
All Russian verbs ending in -n'kat' attested in the RNC (as of September 2013) |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: V-temporal adverbials in Slavic
Unknown - 284.6 KB -
MD5: a043400bcddd91ffa386f6d03cd1bf97
The database for the cited publication |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: V-temporal adverbials in Slavic
Plain Text - 61.5 KB -
MD5: 33258e908be021fcb1ccb4f38cee475b
The database for statistical analysis |
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 -
Why Russian Prefixes Aren’t Empty
Plain Text - 1.1 KB -
MD5: 11d1c771365686606e450d20d886f0e1
This R script will give you the chi-squared value, the degrees of freedom, the p-value, and the effect size for Table 1 in Chapter 3. You can open and read the commentary in the R script to see how it is done. |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Why Russian Prefixes Aren’t Empty
Plain Text - 3.2 KB -
MD5: 460e10aa9d60a3b0fa52e4c9e4a76264
We used a simple formula involving the row and column totals in order to calculate the expected values for all the cells in Table 1. Here it is: expected value = (row sum x column sum) / total sum. The total sum for Table 1 is 382, and all of the row and column totals are listed... |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Why Russian Prefixes Aren’t Empty
Plain Text - 30.0 KB -
MD5: 74c93d226b3e57f3987bc11b99edd2eb
The Russian verb gruzit’ ‘load’ is special for three reasons. First, this verb has two syntactic constructions it can appear in, second it has three Natural Perfectives, and third all three Natural Perfectives can also use both constructions. The two constructions that gruzit’ ‘l... |