Results 31 to 40 of about 19,431 (198)
CONTEMPORARY TRENDS IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CULTURE OF DIGITALIZATION
Bulgaria has been constantly part of the European cultural community and the country itself is a connection for the transfer of cultural influences. We have presented this link to other countries and people who use and used the Cyrillic alphabet.
Hristo Hristov
doaj +1 more source
Analysis of the South Slavic Scripts by Run-Length Features of the Image Texture
The paper proposes an algorithm for the script recognition based on the texture characteristics. The image texture is achieved by coding each letter with the equivalent script type (number code) according to its position in the text line.
Amelio, Alessia +2 more
core +1 more source
Abstract Race and language collaborate in structuring educational inequities, creating urgency for teacher education to equip all teachers to equitably serve racialized multilinguals as antiracist language educators. Emphasizing the inseparability of racial and linguistic justice, this article examines teacher candidates' (TCs') learning journeys ...
Monica Shank Lauwo
wiley +1 more source
Proposal to encode nine Cyrillic characters for Slavonic [PDF]
This is a proposal to add several Cyrillic characters to the international character encoding standard Unicode. These additions were published in Unicode Standard version 6.1 in January 2012.
Baranov, Victor +3 more
core
Yugoslavism between the World Wars: indecisive nation-building [PDF]
This article examines Yugoslav national programs of ruling political elites and its concrete implementation in education policy in interwar Yugoslavia. It is argued that at the beginning of the period Yugoslavism was not inherently incompatible with or ...
Troch, Pieter
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Linguistic Evidence Suggests that Xiōng‐nú and Huns Spoke the Same Paleo‐Siberian Language
Abstract The Xiōng‐nú were a tribal confederation who dominated Inner Asia from the third century BC to the second century AD. Xiōng‐nú descendants later constituted the ethnic core of the European Huns. It has been argued that the Xiōng‐nú spoke an Iranian, Turkic, Mongolic or Yeniseian language, but the linguistic affiliation of the Xiōng‐nú and the ...
Svenja Bonmann, Simon Fries
wiley +1 more source
Language comprehension and the rhythm of perception
It is widely agreed that language understanding has a distinctive phenomenology, as illustrated by phenomenal contrast cases. Yet it remains unclear how to account for the perceptual phenomenology of language experience. I advance a rhythmic account, which explains this phenomenology in terms of changes in the rhythm of sensory capacities in both ...
Alfredo Vernazzani
wiley +1 more source
»Cyrillic does not Kill«: Symbols, Identity, and Memory in Croatian Public Discourse [PDF]
This article addresses identity construction through social symbolic meanings conveyed in discussions about scripts, primarily Cyrillic, in Croatian public discourse.
Ljiljana Šarić +1 more
doaj
Objects as Knowledgeable Elders: Lessons From the Reindeer Calf Halter Mȯnggu̇i
ABSTRACT This article presents ongoing research that reconnects a historical ethnographic collection housed in a European museum with the descendants of its source communities in the transnational Inner Asian region, specifically among the Tozhu and Tukha reindeer herders of the Tyva Republic and Mongolia.
Victoria Soyan Peemot
wiley +1 more source
A língua portuguesa na transcrição cirílica num dicionário do século XVIII
THE PORTUGUESE LANGUAGE IN CYRILLIC TRANSCRIPTION IN AN EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY DICTIONARY In 1787‑1789 two volumes of a huge lexicographic work were published, with the title Linguarum totius orbis vocabularia comparativa (…), commonly called Catherine ...
Przemysław Dębowiak
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