131,251 to 131,260 of 131,265 Results
Jun 16, 2014 - TROLLing
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 - TROLLing
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 13, 2014 - TROLLing
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) |
Jun 13, 2014 -
Metonymy in Word-Formation: Russian, Czech, and Norwegian
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 114.0 KB -
MD5: 28f8ea3059c113974e55d8bb3ea64c62
More charts and comparisons based on the databases. uni = unidirectional metonymy (source-target relationship is not reversed) |
Jun 13, 2014 -
Metonymy in Word-Formation: Russian, Czech, and Norwegian
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 117.5 KB -
MD5: 4f1441a18a3fe9ae6b12974d61351d86
This file contains analysis of the data in Czech database info2.xls. vehicle=source, taut=tautological relationship (source/vehicle=target), uni=unidirectional relationship (not reversible), bi=bidirectional relationship |
Jun 13, 2014 -
Metonymy in Word-Formation: Russian, Czech, and Norwegian
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 196.0 KB -
MD5: 2e039be22e019250e98fa4cde7f2772e
This is the data base of word-formational metonymy designations for Czech. Found in Geeraerts?=whether the type is found in the article by Peirsman & Geeraerts 2006 cited in the article |
Jun 13, 2014 -
Metonymy in Word-Formation: Russian, Czech, and Norwegian
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 48.0 KB -
MD5: 3358bd177d6e137a14588a3a54ef42af
This file contains analysis of the data in Norwegian database info2.xls |
Jun 13, 2014 -
Metonymy in Word-Formation: Russian, Czech, and Norwegian
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 66.5 KB -
MD5: 5db37bb6db7a602fb75b131b391e83a5
This is the data base of word-formational metonymy designations for Norwegian |