Results 51 to 60 of about 3,134,059 (183)
Fault Friction, Plate Rheology, and Mantle Torques From a Global Dynamic Model of Neotectonics
Abstract Improvements in software, parallel computing, global data sets, and laboratory flow‐laws help to develop the global Earth5 thin‐shell finite‐element model of Bird et al. (2008, https://doi.org/10.1029/2007jb005460) into a benchmark study. All experiments confirm that modeled faults (other than megathrusts) have low effective friction of 0.085 ±
Peter Bird +2 more
wiley +1 more source
COMPOUND SENTENCES WITHOUT Kİ IN IRAQI TURKMAN TURKISH
Compound sentences with ki has found way to Turkish by foreign languages during Uygur and Ancient Anatolian Turkish periods. Although compound sentences with ki are used in Iraqi Turkman Turkish, these are much using without ki, in the same way as it was
Suzan TOKATLI
doaj
In the historical study of contemporary Turkic languages and dialects, primary sources include not only spoken language and folklore but also ancient written literary-historical works in Turkish.
QALİBƏ
doaj +1 more source
Anatolian Default Accentuation and Its Diachronic Consequences
This paper adduces evidence for and attempts to phonologically motivate a pattern of descriptive “retraction” of surface word accent in the Anatolian languages.
Anthony D. Yates
semanticscholar +1 more source
Lability in Hittite and Indo‐European: A Diachronic Perspective
ABSTRACT Lability is defined as the possibility of a verb to enter a valency alternation without undergoing any change in its form. Labile verbs were common in ancient Indo‐European languages, including Hittite, which mostly features anticausative lability, with reflexive and reciprocal lability being less prominent.
Guglielmo Inglese
wiley +1 more source
Relative Constructions in Classical/Epic Sanskrit
Abstract While it is widely recognised that Sanskrit shows two major types of relative construction – one relative–correlative, the other similar to postnominal relative clauses in languages like English – it has not been established what the crucial syntactic distinctions are between these types, given the wide range of syntactic variation found in ...
John J. Lowe +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The Neocolonial Tightening of CITES: How Northern Narratives Marginalize Southern Conservation
ABSTRACT CITES has demonstrated a persistent trend of regulatory tightening over five decades, raising critical questions about both equity and effectiveness in global conservation governance. This study examines how structural power imbalances and dominant Northern narratives within the Convention have systematically marginalized pluralistic ...
Youmin Lian, Md. Ziaul Islam
wiley +1 more source
Enduring Crises of the Nation‐State: How Spatial Imaginations Reshape Identity and Dis/Unity
ABSTRACT This article reframes the contemporary “crisis” of the nation‐state not as a simple erosion of sovereignty but as a problem of spatial misalignment: adaptive states remain strategically embedded in dense transnational regimes, yet domestic legitimacy falters when unitary national imaginaries confront heterogeneous, multi‐sited social realities.
Erdem Bekaroğlu, Suat Yazan
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Background With the rapid advancement of technology in healthcare, artificial intelligence (AI) has become an important tool in nursing education and clinical practice. However, there is limited knowledge regarding nursing students' experiences with AI, its areas of use, and their expectations. Aim This study aimed to explore nursing students'
Necibe Dagcan Sahin, Mehmet Yildirim
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Long‐term rates of crustal uplift in southern Calabria and NE Sicily are incompletely understood due to limited information about the age of marine terraces at 1.0–1.3 km above sea level (asl). This study provides a new constraint on high‐elevation terrace ages through integrated analysis of geochronology, stratigraphy, shoreline modeling, and
Rebecca J. Dorsey +5 more
wiley +1 more source

