Results 281 to 290 of about 376,308 (388)
Romance Loans in Middle Dutch and Middle English: Retained or Lost? A Matter of Metre1
Abstract Romance words have been borrowed into all medieval West‐Germanic languages. Modern cognates show that the metrical patterns of loans can differ although the Germanic words remain constant: loan words Dutch kolónie, English cólony, German Koloníe compared with Germanic words Dutch wéduwe, English wídow, German Wítwe.
Johanneke Sytsema, Aditi Lahiri
wiley +1 more source
The Curse of Attention – the Relation between Abnormal Returns, Volume, and Expected Option Returns
a b, Raymond H.Y. So
openalex +1 more source
From prejudice to racial profiling and back. A naἴve intuitive statistician's curse
Manuel Förster, Dominik Karos
openalex +1 more source
Modeling microbiome-trait associations with taxonomy-adaptive neural networks. [PDF]
Jiang Y, Aton M, Zhu Q, Lu YY.
europepmc +1 more source
The Syntactic Status of Subject Clitics: A Problem from Venetan SE‐Constructions
Abstract This article reopens the discussion on the syntax of subject clitics (SCLs) in Venetan dialects by providing a problematic piece of data and outlining its theoretical consequences. New evidence from se‐constructions in Alto Polesine Venetan (APV) shows that SCLs resist a unitary categorisation even within the same dialect group: in varieties ...
Marco Fioratti, Leonardo Russo Cardona
wiley +1 more source
Socio-reproductive Conflicts and the Father’s Curse Dilemma
Mikael Mökkönen +3 more
openalex +2 more sources
Causal impact of air pollution on head and neck cancer: a Mendelian randomization study. [PDF]
Huang DL, Zhao BS, Wu H, Wang SZ, Ni HS.
europepmc +1 more source
The Integration of Norse‐Derived Terms in English: Effects of Formal Similarity1
Abstract Language change arising from language contact is a complex phenomenon. Peter Matthews encouraged researchers to consider it as firmly grounded in the behaviour of individual speakers. We apply this perspective to investigate the integration of Norse‐derived terms into medieval English, testing for the effect of their phonetic similarity to ...
Sara M. Pons‐Sanz, Seán Roberts
wiley +1 more source

