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Culture: The song beyond words

Counselling and Psychotherapy Research, 2001
The paperarises from Pakeha attem pts to dealwith bicultural responsiveness in Aotearoa, New Zealand, and represents the application of a social constructionist conceptual framework to practical issues faced by counsel brsworking around cultural difference.
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Chinese Number Words, Culture, and Mathematics Learning

Review of Educational Research, 2010
This review evaluates the role of language—specifically, the Chinese-based system of number words and the simplicity of Chinese mathematical terms—in explaining the relatively superior performance of Chinese and other East Asian students in cross-national studies of mathematics achievement.
Ng, SSN, Rao, N
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STUDYING WORDS THAT TEACH CULTURE

IRAL - International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, 1996
Native English-speakers have a conception of a private world which in general is different from that of native Chinese-speakers. Misunderstandings which result from this difference can perhaps be avoided as a result of increased understanding of two Chinese categories, si 'private, selfish, illegal' and gong 'public, unselfish, official'.
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Culture, Psychiatry, and the Written Word

Psychiatry, 1959
(1959). Culture, Psychiatry, and the Written Word. Psychiatry: Vol. 22, No. 4, pp. 307-320.
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Japanese key words and core cultural values

Language in Society, 1991
ABSTRACTEvery language has its own key words, which reflect the core values of the culture. Consequently, cultures can be revealingly studied, compared, and explained to outsiders through their key words. But to be able to study, compare, and explain cultures in terms of their key words, we need a culture-independent analytical framework.
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Culture's Lost Words

The Cambridge Quarterly, 2007
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Patients and Words: a Lay Medical Culture?

2003
The chronology of medical history is generally organized around medical discourses and the evolution of ‘scientific’ knowledge. The position or role of the patient has long been ignored or, at best, inferred from medical knowledge, past or present.
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