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  • ...e list of linguists is found at [[:Category:LINGUIST]]. In this portal the linguists are arranged geographically (by their place of work). <div {{greybox}}> Please see the regulations at '''[[Glottopedia:Linguists]]'''.</div>
    1 KB (168 words) - 18:43, 11 March 2011

Page text matches

  • ...s often not explained in linguists' work. When talking about noun phrases, linguists often say [enpi:], using the abbreviation also in speech.
    341 bytes (49 words) - 18:34, 21 September 2014
  • ===Linguists===
    847 bytes (89 words) - 16:16, 8 July 2009
  • ...e list of linguists is found at [[:Category:LINGUIST]]. In this portal the linguists are arranged geographically (by their place of work). <div {{greybox}}> Please see the regulations at '''[[Glottopedia:Linguists]]'''.</div>
    1 KB (168 words) - 18:43, 11 March 2011
  • ...roken down further. ''Root'' is a term which is not uniquely defined. Some linguists consider the root to be the basic [[free morpheme]] in a [[derivation|deriv ...ee'' and the two bound morphemes (or affixes) ''dis''- and -''ment''. Some linguists (e.g. Spencer (1991)) call ''agree'' the root. Others (e.g. Halle (1973)) a
    2 KB (238 words) - 17:41, 21 February 2009
  • ...ories" (such as nominative, accusative, future, pluperfect, etc.), so some linguists have made an attempt to use a more rigorous terminology:
    1 KB (155 words) - 17:17, 3 February 2008
  • ...istic Circle of Copenhagen''' is a local linguistics association of Danish linguists, especially in Copenhagen. It was founded in 1931 by [[Louis Hjelmslev]] an
    375 bytes (49 words) - 16:00, 2 March 2009
  • ...is unproductive. Linguists differ in the way productivity is treated. Many linguists (e.g. Aronoff 1976) take the position that linguistic theory must account f
    2 KB (240 words) - 12:54, 20 February 2009
  • Some linguists have tried to establish separate terms for families with greater and shallo This term was apparently adopted by linguists from biology, where a group of similar plants had been called family since
    1 KB (161 words) - 03:57, 5 January 2021
  • ...widjojo''' ("Pak Soenjono") (d. 2009-09-22) was one of Indonesia's leading linguists, with major contributions relating to the structure of Indonesian, teaching
    307 bytes (38 words) - 11:21, 23 September 2009
  • Many linguists consider appositional compounds a subtype of the so-called [[dvanda compoun
    499 bytes (72 words) - 16:42, 13 November 2008
  • '''Morphonology''' is a term that is sometimes used (especially by European linguists) for [[morphophonology]] (e.g. Martinet (1965), Dressler (1985)). It appear
    456 bytes (53 words) - 15:26, 30 July 2007
  • The '''Association for Linguistic Typology (ALT)''' is an organization of linguists with a special interest in [[language typology]]. It was founded in 1993.
    319 bytes (40 words) - 09:06, 1 June 2014
  • ...'''citation form''' of a [[lexeme]] is the [[word-form]] which is used by linguists and educated speakers when talking ([[metalinguistic]]ally) about the word.
    523 bytes (69 words) - 14:03, 2 July 2007
  • ...e set-up of a language catalogue. At this informal workshop, ways in which linguists can collaborate towards the ambitious goal of creating a Comprehensive Lang
    728 bytes (110 words) - 16:00, 2 March 2009
  • Linguists often say things such as "English has borrowed many words, but almost no sy
    500 bytes (71 words) - 19:22, 22 June 2014
  • ...ers to basically the same phenomena as the term [[agreement]], though some linguists have tried to differentiated the two terms. However, none of these attempts
    410 bytes (55 words) - 19:15, 22 June 2014
  • *[[Portal:Linguists| Linguists]]
    2 KB (230 words) - 07:53, 23 September 2011
  • This term is found useful by many linguists because it is not always easy or helpful to draw a strict line between gram
    681 bytes (92 words) - 08:20, 23 August 2008
  • ...d by adding an [[affix]] which happens to be phonologically [[null]]. Many linguists (e.g. Bloomfield (1933), Kiparsky (1982)) account for [[conversion]] by ass
    864 bytes (126 words) - 20:00, 17 February 2009
  • ...ur Erforschung des "inneren Lehnguts". In: ''5th International Congress of Linguists, Brugge, Réponses au questionnaire''
    694 bytes (87 words) - 20:27, 2 August 2007
  • ...used over two thousand years ago by Pāṇini in his Sanskrit grammar. (Some linguists object to the notion of a null morpheme, since it sets up (they say) an unv According to some linguists' view, it's also a null morpheme that turns some English adjectives into ve
    3 KB (474 words) - 19:59, 17 February 2009
  • ...in a linguistic sense, but in German ''entlehnen'' 'to loan' is the normal linguists' word for 'to borrow'.
    861 bytes (126 words) - 21:02, 16 February 2009
  • ...genetic classifications. Such interdisciplinary studies are made easier if linguists shift to ''genealogical classification''.
    859 bytes (98 words) - 17:15, 12 July 2007
  • The reason this term was largely given up by linguists is that it was felt that [[subordinator]]s and [[coordinator]]s do not real
    613 bytes (85 words) - 15:40, 27 July 2014
  • ...gmatic unit between the morpheme and the phrase that is generally taken by linguists to correspond to the element written between two spaces in many orthographi
    697 bytes (89 words) - 19:56, 2 August 2014
  • ...dered as word classes, but are often not considered word classes by modern linguists:)
    1 KB (121 words) - 07:22, 26 June 2007
  • Some linguists have solved this problem by allowing for [[truncation]] rules, which delete
    1 KB (183 words) - 20:27, 24 January 2008
  • ...e not terms but would be considered to be arguments or complements by most linguists who use these terms.
    1 KB (142 words) - 10:15, 21 September 2007
  • ...prehensive grammar of the Sanskrit language. He is best known among modern linguists and philologists for formulating "Wackernagel's Law", concerning the placem
    1 KB (156 words) - 10:46, 30 October 2007
  • ...ctivity and frequency. ''Proceedings of the 13th International Congress of Linguists'', 163-171.
    1 KB (140 words) - 00:14, 10 August 2007
  • ...' is not fully transparent either. It is perhaps for this reason that many linguists continue to use this term, especially in typology (e.g. Hengeveld et al. 20
    1 KB (160 words) - 23:51, 21 July 2007
  • Since we linguists are attempting to be realistic, we cannot treat a linguistic structure as j
    863 bytes (120 words) - 19:04, 28 January 2018
  • ...holas Trubetzkoy]] in a contribution to the 1928 International Congress of Linguists (Trubetzkoy 1930). Apparently it occurred earlier in Trubetzkoy (1923), in
    1 KB (166 words) - 09:37, 26 June 2008
  • Some linguists have said or implied that ''theoretical linguistics'' implies the study of
    2 KB (210 words) - 10:19, 21 September 2007
  • ...is [[languoid]], but a languoid is any language or group of languages that linguists might be interested in, so its meaning is much broader.
    2 KB (267 words) - 21:34, 15 February 2009
  • ...''to her mother'', and ''by e-mail'' would be considered obliques by many linguists. Note that ''on Monday'' and ''by e-mail'' are [[adjunct]]s, while ''to her
    1 KB (196 words) - 15:48, 30 August 2007
  • The existence of circumfixes is controversial. Many linguists argue that all cases of alleged circumfixation can be reduced to suffixatio
    1 KB (184 words) - 13:39, 23 April 2008
  • [[International Congress of Linguists]]
    1 KB (131 words) - 16:00, 2 March 2009
  • ...eakening of the [[Level Ordering Hypothesis]], and (not surprisingly) many linguists (e.g. Halle &amp; Vergnaud (1987)) regard the loop as an admission that lev
    1 KB (213 words) - 10:14, 17 February 2009
  • ...chez remain unpublished, though they have begun to be used by contemporary linguists. ...os.org/310.htm his obituary of Haas] that she trained more [[Americanist]] linguists than her former instructors Edward Sapir and Franz Boas combined: she super
    4 KB (548 words) - 18:22, 30 October 2007
  • ...ciently parseable and having the rigidity of formalism which computational linguists require.
    4 KB (631 words) - 16:43, 9 April 2008
  • * NCL proposes explanations for many phenomena that linguists and psychologists have found puzzling. For example: More recently, since the term ''cognitive'' is now being used by other linguists for other theories even though they have not shown how their accounts of li
    3 KB (495 words) - 06:17, 8 October 2017
  • The tern ''ellipsis'' is rarely used with a strictly defined meaning. Linguists have often attempted to distinguish various different types of non-expressi
    1 KB (173 words) - 18:59, 28 June 2014
  • ...anguage or two different languages depends on what the speakers think, and linguists are not so rigid in applying their definitions that they would insist on ta ...e subsystems is lacking or not working properly, language use breaks down. Linguists have generally focused their attention on the inventory of words and the gr
    6 KB (1,027 words) - 02:37, 19 March 2016
  • ...rudiments of linguistic analysis for several generations of North American linguists. Accompanying the textbook was his ''Workbook in Descriptive Linguistics''
    2 KB (250 words) - 08:03, 26 June 2007
  • Some linguists (e.g. Bloomfield 1933, Kiparsky 1982) assume that converted forms are deriv
    2 KB (245 words) - 17:32, 18 May 2008
  • The tern ''ellipsis'' is rarely used with a strictly defined meaning. Linguists have often attempted to distinguish various different types of non-expressi
    2 KB (193 words) - 18:59, 28 June 2014
  • ...| [[Portal:Linguistic research|Linguistic research]] | [[Portal:Linguists|Linguists]] ...nd [[Glottopedia:Language articles|language articles]], potentially on all linguists and all languages.
    8 KB (758 words) - 10:19, 15 August 2023
  • ...ated to [[agreement]] phenomena, but the similarity is quite remote. While linguists familiar only with some of major European languages might find negative con
    2 KB (253 words) - 07:20, 30 August 2007
  • ...are also doculects. The use of the term '''doculect''' is meant to remind linguists of the fact that
    2 KB (352 words) - 08:34, 10 April 2008
  • ...oach to word-formation”, Proceedings of the 16th International Congress of Linguists, Oxford, paper No. 0239.
    2 KB (248 words) - 17:03, 11 November 2007
  • ...'', but the term was found to be too ambiguous, since it was being used by linguists in many different ways. The term '''realizational level''', however, is st
    2 KB (237 words) - 06:10, 8 October 2017
  • ...uistic area|areal groups]], or indeed any other groups treated together by linguists for some reason) may also be considered together with languages and dialect
    3 KB (388 words) - 08:56, 10 April 2008
  • ...ypically is, and (ii) inflection is usually peripheral to derivation. Some linguists (e.g. Aronoff (1976), Anderson (1982), Perlmutter (1988)) assume that deriv
    3 KB (369 words) - 18:48, 12 February 2009
  • ...de a survey of the most important theoretical positions held by generative linguists.
    2 KB (339 words) - 19:18, 17 February 2009
  • 3 KB (484 words) - 10:09, 11 February 2008
  • ...proaches that go under the heading of [[cognitive linguistics]]. Mentalist linguists try to describe the mental patterns of language (or the [[internalized gram
    2 KB (264 words) - 17:09, 30 May 2013
  • What linguists have customarily called [[construction|constructions]] can all be viewed as
    2 KB (275 words) - 19:07, 28 January 2018
  • ...ries of volumes through the 1980s and 1990s. An international community of linguists from Europe and South America is involved in the practice and development o
    3 KB (400 words) - 15:53, 2 March 2009
  • The concept "morpheme" is not uncontroversial. A number of linguists dispute the explanatory power of the morpheme as a theoretical construct, a
    2 KB (238 words) - 16:42, 13 September 2018
  • Other historical linguists remained skeptical towards the idea of radical reanalysis. Most preferred t
    3 KB (419 words) - 17:09, 29 October 2007
  • Due to this impreciseness, a number of linguists have suggested that the terminology should be abandoned entirely in cross-l
    2 KB (256 words) - 16:33, 14 October 2015
  • These definitions are of course not satisfactory, because they do not say why linguists enter elements into a dictionary or write them between two spaces etc.
    2 KB (281 words) - 09:27, 16 July 2022
  • ....), Parametric Linguistics and Learnability: A Self-Contained Tutorial for Linguists. Cambridge 2002.
    2 KB (241 words) - 08:13, 20 July 2014
  • ...rtain defects and mistakes) and they belong to the few things contemporary linguists know about QL. Later, Zipf’s model was conceptually and mathematically im ...ics and raised a storm of calculations on diverse language phenomena. Many linguists responded well to this novel approach, among them in particular Gustav Herd
    7 KB (952 words) - 12:44, 5 October 2007
  • The linguists Stephen Levinson and Penelope Brown were the first to sub-divide an individ
    2 KB (327 words) - 18:59, 27 September 2014
  • Although the spelling ''Kirgiz'' is now generally preferred by Turkic linguists,<ref>see Kirchner 1998:542</ref> ''Kirghiz'' is is also sometimes used to i
    3 KB (334 words) - 16:33, 4 February 2013
  • ...to the phonological system of the [[recipient language]]. However, as some linguists assume that the process of integration happens gradually, some forms of bor ...bson 1953) and [[Einar Haugen]] (e.g. Haugen 1956) were among the earliest linguists to develop the notion.
    10 KB (1,391 words) - 15:32, 31 January 2010
  • ...borrowing" is hardly appropriate. However, it is very deeply entrenched in linguists' (and lay persons') usage.
    3 KB (454 words) - 17:05, 9 September 2009
  • ...g both newcomers to the field of Athabaskan linguistics and non-Athabaskan linguists.”
    4 KB (570 words) - 21:30, 10 March 2008
  • ...[Roman Jakobson]] and [[Nikolai Trubetzkoy]]) shaped the thinking of young linguists at that time. Unfortunately, the successive development of the country, the
    4 KB (585 words) - 21:36, 3 April 2008
  • There are several linguists, who have come up with similar examples like the last one. Lyons (1975) (cf ...sformational ambiguity. Basically, neither categorisation is wrong as many linguists do not distinguish transformational from grammatical ambiguity. Thus, trans
    12 KB (1,883 words) - 16:39, 15 June 2014
  • ...ry changing, and (ii) inflection is usually peripheral to derivation. Some linguists (e.g. Aronoff (1976), Anderson (1982), Perlmutter (1988)) assume that infle
    3 KB (418 words) - 21:53, 8 February 2021
  • ...erfect, the past perfect and the future perfect defy easy categorization.” Linguists' different views on the number of English tenses can be grouped into four d Linguists who favor a binary approach argue that different tenses have to be distingu
    26 KB (4,208 words) - 16:34, 27 July 2014
  • ...f. Trnka also re-viewed Zipf’s studies: he was the first to acquaint Czech linguists with Zipf’s work (1950b). Trnka pointed out the independence of and the d
    6 KB (840 words) - 12:43, 28 November 2007
  • Many linguists suppose that lexemes have meanings. In what sense of ''have'' can this not
    4 KB (712 words) - 06:35, 8 October 2017
  • ...aussure, was mainly interested in the structure of language. Consequently, linguists adopted the qualitative means of mathematics: logics, algebra, set theory. ...nitive interest. QL researchers study the same scientific objects as other linguists. However, QL emphasises, in contrast to other branches of linguistics, the
    9 KB (1,442 words) - 10:11, 14 June 2014
  • ...nguistic, converb is never used to render deepricastie. Also, some Russian linguists have started using this the term konverb.
    4 KB (534 words) - 23:17, 7 August 2009
  • ...ight belong to a specific register for another speaker. Nevertheless, many linguists hold the view that speakers often only control one or two social varieties ...re is a close relationship between language and context of situation. Most linguists agree with this definition. However, two perspectives of register classific
    16 KB (2,262 words) - 16:59, 22 May 2013
  • ...:0px 0px">Tomo Maretić is considered to be one of the greatest of Croatian linguists. Tomo Maretic was born on October 13, 1854 in Virovitica, a small Croatian ...for linguistic education of several gen­er­ations of Croatian and Serbian linguists. It was in this book that, as far as we know, the first Croatian or Serbian
    17 KB (2,311 words) - 13:14, 16 August 2007
  • ...e's personality (''positive face'') (see: [[positive and negative Face]]). Linguists Stephen Levinson and Penelope Brown were the first to divide these two aspe
    6 KB (925 words) - 16:12, 29 June 2014
  • Herdan studied rather philology than linguistics and adhered — as did many linguists at that time — to the teachings of de Saussure und those of the Prague s ...too much on his own linguistic knowledge, and avoided any cooperation with linguists – as opposed to his activities in medicine, where he concentrated on stat
    15 KB (2,047 words) - 23:54, 1 February 2010
  • Historical linguists have generally focused on languages rather than speakers, and have used the
    11 KB (1,477 words) - 06:57, 22 October 2009
  • .... Though obvious and abundant, this evidence tends to be neglected by many linguists, who work with theories of language that have no way of being put into oper
    9 KB (1,294 words) - 05:24, 8 March 2018
  • *1981a. Everything that linguists have always wanted to know about logic (but were ashamed to ask). Chicago: *1986d. What linguists might contribute to dictionary-making if they could get their act together.
    31 KB (4,322 words) - 06:06, 8 March 2009
  • ...most important contribution might be that of perception (Payne 2006: 609). Linguists paid more attention to cognitive perception when dealing with categorizatio
    14 KB (2,063 words) - 14:53, 20 May 2013
  • ...in his phonetic transcriptions the adapted forms of the Roman letters that linguists are familiar with today in the alphabet of the International Phonetic Assoc
    12 KB (1,789 words) - 19:35, 2 August 2014
  • Linguists of the Prague school argued that a sentence can be structured into two part
    16 KB (2,344 words) - 11:49, 20 May 2013
  • *Herdan, Gustav (1964). On communication between linguists. Linguistics 9, 71-76.
    15 KB (2,010 words) - 23:55, 1 February 2010
  • ...it played an important role in promoting mathematical methods among Polish linguists.
    26 KB (3,899 words) - 14:02, 28 November 2007
  • ...s it is based on the IPA, the Woodburn transcription is more accessible to linguists, while the Anyawire orthography is closer to Sandawe and other written lang
    26 KB (3,968 words) - 08:14, 5 January 2021
  • ...ity and frequency”, in ''Proceedings of the XIII International Congress of Linguists'', a cura di S. Hattori e K. Inoue, Tokyo, Permanent International Commitee
    36 KB (5,037 words) - 19:59, 20 July 2014