4,201 to 4,210 of 4,726 Results
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MD5: 32a0a288cadeb53b64e7623726ce368c
R-Code |
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MD5: 8f75c1dc5c184f8a36c5a39762301a3d
README |
Apr 30, 2017
Danckaert, Lieven, 2017, "Replication Data for: Subject Placement in the History of Latin", https://doi.org/10.18710/V9D674, DataverseNO, V1
The present dataset was used in a corpus study on the diachrony of subject placement in the history of Latin, to appear in 'Catalan Journal of Linguistics'. The main file contains a set of Latin examples, which have all been annotated for a number of variables needed for the purp... |
Plain Text - 6.0 KB -
MD5: ecbe67906a1bfdc3e3bf8e6dd5ba8095
This file contains the R-code used in the study. |
Plain Text - 518.6 KB -
MD5: 7dc9fde5646c14c17845e83c768de58a
This file contains the original data used for the study. |
Plain Text - 3.4 KB -
MD5: e54aa28102c52f58d5f4f15773775813
This file contains a detailed description of the replication data. |
Nov 21, 2016
Nordrum, Maria, 2016, "Replication Data for: The aspectual triplets of putat’: The Telicity Hypothesis and two ways to test it", https://doi.org/10.18710/ZYOAXC, DataverseNO, V1
Traditionally, aspectual triplets (e.g. množit’sja/umnožit’sja/umnožat’sja ‘multiply) have been assumed to be very rare in the Russian verb system. Recent studies show that they are frequent and systematic: Janda et al. (2013: 170) report that 37% of Russian simplex imperfectives... |
Nov 21, 2016 -
Replication Data for: The aspectual triplets of putat’: The Telicity Hypothesis and two ways to test it
Plain Text - 22.2 KB -
MD5: f6a58e2171e8cb50f7d2320ad5ea213c
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Nov 21, 2016 -
Replication Data for: The aspectual triplets of putat’: The Telicity Hypothesis and two ways to test it
Plain Text - 1.1 KB -
MD5: ff3de65d35d6fbbaae6db51ead7d273c
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Nov 21, 2016 -
Replication Data for: The aspectual triplets of putat’: The Telicity Hypothesis and two ways to test it
Plain Text - 36.3 KB -
MD5: 78390d3189ab7cf8511be1fb3214afb9
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