Results 201 to 210 of about 1,134 (298)
Enhancing creative writing through AI-powered co-creation with cognitive and emotional outcomes. [PDF]
Cen X, Shakibaei G.
europepmc +1 more source
Verb patterning and acculturation in Nigerian English
Abstract Speech communities have the tendency to develop habits as to which words tend to co‐occur, in the form of coinages and collocational patterns, thus constituting an aspect conducive to the subtle emergence of language variation. As these co‐occurrence tendencies become lexicalised and confined to specific, rigid word combinations, new ...
Mary Ifeoluwa Abidoye, Hans‐Georg Wolf
wiley +1 more source
Gulf Arabic Noun and Verb Retrieval: What Matters? [PDF]
Khwaileh T +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
Consonant clusters in Nigerian English
Abstract This study explores consonant cluster production and its influencing factors in Nigerian English using a corpus‐based approach. More than 4000 onset and coda consonant clusters produced in the broadcast talks, broadcast discussions and broadcast news from ICE‐Nigeria by a total of 44 speakers were analysed with reference to cluster position ...
Ulrike Gut, Philipp Meer
wiley +1 more source
The phoenix of phonaesthetics: the rise of an old-new research paradigm on the beauty of language sound. [PDF]
Nemestothy L, Kogan VV, Reiterer SM.
europepmc +1 more source
Nigerian English: History, functions and features
Abstract This article offers a comprehensive overview of Nigerian English, a rapidly expanding variety of world Englishes, recognised as one of the fastest‐growing varieties of English globally in numerical terms. This article has four aims. First, it discusses the historical developments of English in Nigeria with reference to the events that led to ...
Kingsley O. Ugwuanyi +1 more
wiley +1 more source
SauDial: The Saudi Arabic dialects game localization dataset. [PDF]
Alanazi N, Al-Batineh M, Abu-Rayyash H.
europepmc +1 more source
Cultural conceptualisations and the cultural model of fertility and infertility in Nigerian English
Abstract The article scrutinises the concepts of fertility and infertility as reflected in Nigerian English. For this, a mixed‐methods approach is suggested that uses the Corpus of Global Web‐based English as a resource to shed light on lexical frequency and collocations, as well as a newspaper corpus of online articles from The Guardian and Vanguard ...
Anna Finzel
wiley +1 more source

