Results 181 to 190 of about 1,650 (206)
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The Great Buddha of the Khalkha River

Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1992
The Khalkha River (Khalkhin Gol), which forms part of the north-east frontier between the Mongolian People–s Republic (MPR) and the People's Republic of China (PRC), is famous in Mongolian history for the 1939 Battle of Khalkhin Gol (Nomonhan), in which joint Mongolian-Soviet forces finally repulsed the attempted invasion of the MPR by the Japanese ...
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XXIII Life in a Khalkha Steppe Lamasery

Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1914
In August, September, and October, 1913, I was engaged on one of a series of journeys in Mongolia, which I hope, if I am given the opportunity to complete them, will enable me to collect sufficient data for a work about this little-known country and its people, a subject upon which English literature is perhaps even poorer than that of the other ...
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Vowel harmony in Khalkha Mongolian, Yaka, Finnish and Hungarian

Phonology Yearbook, 1985
The discussion of vowel harmony in this paper continues the theoretical discussion that was sparked by Clements' first proposals concerning an autosegmental treatment of vowel harmony in general (1980 [1976]). I will attempt to show that problems that arose in early autosegmental treatments of certain types of vowel harmony can be elegantly overcome ...
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Khalkha-mongolische Grammatik

Oriens, 1952
Ahmet Temir, Nicolaus Poppe
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The Autobiography of the First Khalkha Zaya Paṇḍita Lobsang Trinley

2020
Abstract The First Zaya Paṇḍita Lobsang Trinley (Tib. Blo bzang ’phrin las, Mong. Luvsanphrinle, 1642–1715) was and remains known as one of the most prolific Mongolian Buddhist masters in history. Despite his desire to stay in Tibet to continue his study of Buddhism, he was sent back to Mongolia to spread the Dharma among the Mongols by ...
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Factual vs. evidential? The past tense forms of spoken Khalkha Mongolian

2018
Past tense forms of spoken Khalkha Mongolian distinguish between established (‑sang) and non-established knowledge, which is then either based on direct (‑laa) or indirect (‑jee) evidence. Time of acquisition thus determines whether information source is marked, though vivid recollection (‑laa) and deferred realization (‑jee) overrule it.
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Khalkha-Mongolische Grammatik, mit Bibliographie, Sprachproben und Glossar

Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 1956
Frederick H. Buck, Nikolaus Poppe
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Articulatory and acoustic correlates of tongue root advancement in Khalkha Mongolian

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
This paper presents articulatory and acoustic data of tongue root contrasts in Khalkha Mongolian, comparing acoustic cues in F1 and F2 to measurements of tongue root position from 3-D/4-D ultrasound imaging. The primary acoustic cue of [ + ATR] across languages is decreased F1 (Stalwart, 2008), with various effects on F2 and F1 bandwidth found in the ...
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