This article interrogates the role of testimonial disclosure as a mechanism of access and a barrier to visibility for marginal people, particularly adolescents, in the UK. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted between 2021 and 2024 in alternative educational provision (AP), as well as in English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) classes ...
Kelly Fagan Robinson
wiley +1 more source
Digital Glossary of Sinhala Prakrit (version 2.0), letters N to Z
Francesco Bianchini, Katherine Gazzard
openalex +1 more source
The European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) Precision Medicine Glossary.
Lucy R. Yates +14 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Loanwords and Linguistic Phylogenetics: *pelek̑u‐ ‘axe’ and *(H)a(i̯)g̑‐ ‘goat’1
Abstract This paper assesses the role of borrowings in two different approaches to linguistic phylogenetics: Traditional qualitative analyses of lexemes, and quantitative computational analysis of cognacy. It problematises the assumption that loanwords can be excluded altogether from datasets of lexical cognacy.
Simon Poulsen
wiley +1 more source
GeneDrive.jl: A decision tool to optimize biological vector control strategies under climate change. [PDF]
Vásquez VN, Mordecai EA, Anthoff D.
europepmc +1 more source
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
A mechanical perspective on suction feeding in fishes. [PDF]
Camp AL, Van Wassenbergh S.
europepmc +1 more source
From faults to fractures – a German glossary based on English terms.
Alena Broge +4 more
openalex +2 more sources
Anthropology and the Arts: Glossary of Hausa Music and Its Social Contexts. DAVID W. AMES and ANTHONY V. KING [PDF]
Harriet Ottenheimer
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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

