Results 141 to 150 of about 631 (178)
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Calibrating Kurmanji and Sorani
Routledge Handbook on the Kurds, 2018Michael L. Chyet
exaly +3 more sources
The History of Kurdish and the Development of Literary Kurmanji
2021Ergin Opengin, Cengiz Gunes
exaly +3 more sources
The Fable of the Beetle in Contemporary Aramaic and Kurmanji
Aramaic Studies, 2021Abstract The fable of an insect and a mouse (or some other animal), who marry and embark on a life together, only to end in tragedy, is widely disseminated from the Mediterranean region to India. One version involving a beetle (Ṭuroyo keze, Kurmanji kêz) circulates throughout Anatolia and Iraq. The following Ṭuroyo and Kurmanji version was recorded
C.G. Häberl, S. Loesov
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Iran and the Caucasus
Abstract This is an attempt of explaining the origin of Kurmanji p’irč ‘hair’ within the paradigm of forms revealing similar phonetic developments, i.e., hirč ‘bear’ and birčī ‘hungry’.
G. Asatrian
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Abstract This is an attempt of explaining the origin of Kurmanji p’irč ‘hair’ within the paradigm of forms revealing similar phonetic developments, i.e., hirč ‘bear’ and birčī ‘hungry’.
G. Asatrian
openaire +2 more sources
Clause Combining, Ergativity, and Coreferent Deletion in Kurmanji
Studies in Language, 1997A distinction is commonly made between morphological or surface ergativity, and syntactic or deep ergativity, based on what Dixon has termed the "pivot" behavior (S/A vs. S/O) of a language. Since marked constructions enable an S/A pivot to function even in some deep ergative languages, deep or syntactic ergativity might be interpreted as gradational ...
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The acquisition of split-ergative case marking in Kurmanji Kurdish
Trends in Language Acquisition Research, 2013This study examines the acquisition of split-ergative case marking in Kurmanji Kurdish, a language undergoing a shift in its case marking system, resulting in variable and inconsistent input to children. Data include naturalistic speech samples from a 12-month period from children (n = 12) from three age groups, 1;6, 2;6, and 3;6, and their caregivers (
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International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation, 2022
This contribution presents our efforts to develop the automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems for three low resource languages: Kurmanji Kurdish, Cree and Inuktut.
Vishwa Gupta, Gilles Boulianne
semanticscholar +1 more source
This contribution presents our efforts to develop the automatic speech recognition (ASR) systems for three low resource languages: Kurmanji Kurdish, Cree and Inuktut.
Vishwa Gupta, Gilles Boulianne
semanticscholar +1 more source
Kurmanji complementation: Semantic-typological aspects in an areal perspective
STUF - Language Typology and Universals, 2002exaly +3 more sources

