Results 11 to 20 of about 561,213 (161)

A Study of Grammatical Gradience in Relation to the Distributional Properties of Verbal Nouns in Scottish Gaelic

open access: yesLanguages
Verbal nouns in Insular Celtic languages have long been a subject of interest because they are capable of exhibiting both nominal and verbal properties, posing a persistent challenge when it comes to determining their precise categorization.
Avelino Corral Esteban
doaj   +2 more sources

The subsystem of loanwords in English: Properties, categorisation, prototypicity and representation

open access: yesLexis: Journal in English Lexicology
This study highlights the linguistic specificities of loanwords and uses a theoretical model based on the assumption that the English lexicon is composed of different subsystems.
Pierre Fournier
doaj   +2 more sources

Benchmarking AI acceptability and grammaticality in German: A study of ChatGPT and human judgments

open access: yesAI-Linguistica
The rapid development of large language models has opened new avenues for linguistic research, including areas traditionally reliant on native-speaker intuitions.
Nicholas Catasso
doaj   +2 more sources

The effect of language structures in social event attribution among L2 English learner

open access: yesActa Psychologica
This article investigates whether English positive-negative alternating causal clauses and active-passive alternating syntactic structures make a difference in social event attribution of Chinese-L1 English-L2 learners.
Chengping Xu, Xiangru Meng
doaj   +2 more sources

How syntactic gradience in L1 affects L3 acquisition

open access: yesLinguistic Approaches to Bilingualism, 2023
The article reports on a longitudinal study of syntactic cross-linguistic influence (CLI) among L1 Polish learners of L2 English and L3 Norwegian. The study mainly aimed to determine the influence of gradience in L1 on third language acquisition.
Sylwiusz Żychliński   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Wagiman Landscape: Mental Maps and Prototypes

open access: yesOceania, Volume 92, Issue 3, Page 287-309, November 2022., 2022
ABSTRACT This paper examines the classification of the landscape, both biota and terrain, in Wagiman, a language of northern Australia. There is considerable debate as to the comparative roles of cognitive and cultural factors in the analysis of landscape terminologies. Any analysis of terminologies necessarily involves consideration of meaning.
Mark Harvey
wiley   +1 more source

The Acceptability Delta Criterion: Testing Knowledge of Language using the Gradience of Sentence Acceptability

open access: yesBlackboxNLP Workshop on Analyzing and Interpreting Neural Networks for NLP, 2021
Any test that promises to assess Human Knowledge of Language (KoL) for any statistically-based Language Model (LM) must meet three requirements: (1) comprehensive coverage of linguistic phenomena; (2) replicable and statistically-vetted human judgement ...
Héctor Javier Vázquez Martínez
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Phonetic variability and grammatical knowledge: an articulatory study of Korean place assimilation. [PDF]

open access: yes, 2008
The study reported here uses articulatory data to investigate Korean place assimilation of coronal stops followed by labial or velar stops, both within words and across words.
Ahn   +29 more
core   +1 more source

Adverbial clauses and adverbial concord [PDF]

open access: yes, 2019
This paper speculates that the merge site of an adverbial clause, i.e. its external syntax, is determined by its derivational history, i.e. its internal syntax.
Endo, Yoshio, Haegeman, Liliane
core   +2 more sources

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