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  • This category collects articles related to '''Language description'''.
    6 members (1 subcategory, 0 files) - 17:39, 29 January 2009

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  • *[[Language description]] :An (exhaustive) description of structural phenomena in a particular language
    398 bytes (47 words) - 18:13, 11 October 2008
  • ...[corpus]] of [[raw data]] and [[primary data]] of a little-known language. Language documentation became a major concern of linguistics only in the 1990s as a Language documentation is sometimes said to be the object of the new linguistic subf
    2 KB (219 words) - 19:31, 13 August 2007
  • ...nguistics is concerned with constructing [[linguistic theory|theories]] of language or languages, or with developing [[linguistic theory]]. ...pts and findings of linguistics to a variety of practical tasks, including language-teaching."'' (Lyons 1981:35)
    2 KB (210 words) - 10:19, 21 September 2007
  • ...anguages. When in doubt, add an article here and not in [[:Category:Single language]]. [[:Category:Single language]]
    34 members (11 subcategories, 0 files) - 13:20, 30 January 2013
  • englisch [[language documentation]] [[Category:Language description]]
    129 bytes (12 words) - 11:00, 20 February 2009
  • This category collects articles related to '''Language description'''.
    6 members (1 subcategory, 0 files) - 17:39, 29 January 2009
  • ...on was originally developed for British English (1984, 1985). However, his description, which recognises a phonetic level and a morphological level, can also be a ...] are frameworks to transcribe intonation, both based on the autosegmental description.
    2 KB (270 words) - 11:35, 18 February 2009
  • ...basic categories and relations used in the scientific description of human language.
    364 bytes (45 words) - 16:13, 6 May 2008
  • ...L]] in the [[Ethnologue]], and [[ANSI Z39.53]] (also known as the [[MARC]] language codes) proved more adequate. ...O 639-5 and ISO 639-6, which deal with [[genealogical classification]] and language variation, respectively, in 2008.
    1 KB (194 words) - 20:10, 2 August 2007
  • ...refers to the set of descriptive notions that is commonly used in language description. ...or the fundamental theoretical concepts that underlie all work in language description and change, and the postulation of general properties of human languages."'
    1 KB (220 words) - 15:04, 22 January 2009
  • ...fundamentally from... language description [which] aims at the record of a language... as a system of abstract elements, constructions, and rules."'' (Himmelma
    675 bytes (85 words) - 12:22, 4 September 2008
  • * [[Universalien]]forschung und [[Rara (de)]] // Language [[universals]] and [[rara]]/particulars/rarissima * [[Sprachtod]], [[bedrohte Sprachen]] // [[Language death]], [[endangered languages]]
    2 KB (152 words) - 21:13, 24 July 2007
  • ...nown for its software applications, widely used in the field of [[language description]], its collection of fonts, and for the maintenance of the [[Ethnologue]].
    535 bytes (73 words) - 09:15, 17 September 2007
  • ...tains a higher level of descriptive adequacy if it can handle more natural language data from more languages. ...ive adequacy obviously is closely related to what counts as 'good' natural language data, and hence to the concepts of [[grammaticality]] and [[well-formedness
    516 bytes (70 words) - 18:06, 28 June 2014
  • ...e major functions of the noun phrase. In ''Language Typology and syntactic description,'' vol. 1. ''Clause structure,'' ed. by Timothy Shopen, pp. 62–154
    379 bytes (47 words) - 17:30, 29 March 2008
  • '''Definite description''' is a definite noun phrase which is used to refer to exactly one individu ''the king of France'' in (i) is a definite description that can only be properly used if France has one and only one king:
    2 KB (246 words) - 03:29, 18 May 2009
  • '''Agglutinating language''' is a language which has a morphological system in which words as a rule are polymorphemic ...(in)[[flectional language]]s, [[isolating language]]s, and [[polysynthetic language]]s. One basic assumption underlying this typology is that agglutination is
    1 KB (191 words) - 15:28, 18 May 2014
  • ...ance to a rewrite rule. But unlike rewrite or mutation rules in a process description, realization formulae are not necessarily ordered. For example, a pair of ...p://books.google.com/books/about/Language_and_Reality.html?id=vrlPUxB2_JwC Language and Reality: Selected Writings of Sydney Lamb], Continuum, 2004.
    1 KB (172 words) - 01:46, 26 July 2018
  • [[Category:Language description]]
    848 bytes (108 words) - 17:11, 5 July 2007
  • ...aging in the clause. In T. Shopen, eds., ''Language Typology and Syntactic Description'', 282-364. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    531 bytes (63 words) - 14:53, 5 July 2009

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