Results 181 to 190 of about 157,140 (342)
The inclusive-exclusive distinction in Tibeto-Burman languages
A survey of 170 Tibeto-Burman languages showed 69 with a distinction between inclusive and exclusive first-person plural pronouns, 18 of which also show inclusive- exclusive in Idual.
LaPolla, Randy J.
core
Delineating gender/sex‐related studies through bibliometric analysis
Abstract The multidisciplinary and socially grounded nature of Women's/Gender/Feminist Studies poses unique challenges for bibliometric analysis, as it extends beyond conventional disciplinary boundaries. This paper makes three key contributions: (1) We propose a novel retrieval method for constructing a corpus of scholarly documents in research areas ...
Natsumi S. Shokida +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The chapter ‘The Language of Linguistics’ from Part 6 ‘New Paradigm of Communication’ of THE MISCOMMUNICATION TRILOGY, ‘The Conspiracy of Speech, Vol. I.’ presents a dense and philosophically ambitious critique of linguistics as both a scientific discipline and a historical force that reshapes communication itself. It situates linguistics not merely as
openaire +1 more source
Comparative analysis of text readability and writing styles in AI-generated vs. Human-written academic abstracts. [PDF]
Zou Y, Kuek F, Ng KH, Cheng X.
europepmc +1 more source
This chapter looks at language endangerment in the People's Republic of China, focusing on three of the main factors that influence language maintenance in China today: increased contact due to population movements and changes in the economy; the ...
Poa, Dory, LaPolla, Randy J.
core
When AI outputs become documents: Documentation activity in human–AI dialogue
Abstract Large language models (LLMs) generate texts that increasingly circulate as documents in knowledge infrastructures, yet their documentary status remains theoretically underdetermined. Unlike traditional documents, LLM outputs lack identifiable authorship, stable provenance, or testimonial grounding.
Sascha Donner
wiley +1 more source
Language and linguistics [PDF]
openaire +1 more source
Grammatical metaphor studies: historical review and outlook. [PDF]
Yu Y, Wang T.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract This review analyzed 241 scholarly articles published between 2010 and 2025 in information science venues to examine how affect shapes refugees' information behavior during forced migration and to identify additional contextual factors. It identifies seven affective dimensions: anxiety, shame and stigma, grief and loss, frustration, (mis)trust,
Maja Krtalić, Lilach Alon
wiley +1 more source

