107,061 to 107,070 of 107,075 Results
Plain Text - 5.2 MB -
MD5: fad1d2d062fed3496eed8b7adc6482b7
This file contains all the examples upon which the research in this study is based. In this dataset, byti is treated as a single verb. These examples are extracted from the PROIEL corpus. In this dataset, the forms of byti are represented as a single paradigm. Description of columns A=source (the manuscript that the example comes from); values=Mar... |
Jun 18, 2014 -
Romanian Weak Pronoun Choice Data
Plain Text - 4.0 KB -
MD5: 1a64ec838fbb219910c85e75820c9a64
description of the xml format of the extracted data |
Jun 18, 2014 -
North Norwegian consonants from the inside
Plain Text - 6.0 KB -
MD5: f68ea4b2c9402717e99c1bbfcbcefa47
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Jun 17, 2014 -
Variation in pri- and pod- attenuatives in Russian
Plain Text - 326.1 KB -
MD5: c92d2f6fd2ebd96fab97c63e5f7464df
Csv for statistical analysis |
Jun 17, 2014 -
Variation in pri- and pod- attenuatives in Russian
Plain Text - 14.6 KB -
MD5: 926bdb4a437afbb8b68e1ad69c01f8e7
R script used for the analysis |
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 -
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 -
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. |
