Results 151 to 160 of about 1,573 (170)

Restored iron transport by a small molecule promotes absorption and hemoglobinization in animals. [PDF]

open access: yesScience, 2017
Grillo AS   +21 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Feocromocitona: presentación de un caso y revisión parcial de la literatura [PDF]

open access: yes, 1974
Alberola, V.   +6 more
core  
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Nominalizations in Murui (Witotoan)

STUF - Language Typology and Universals, 2018
AbstractThis paper discusses forms, types, and functions of nominalizations in Murui, a Witotoan language spoken in Colombia and Peru. It is concerned with those nominalizations that involve classifiers and those that do not (agentive S/A nominalizations and event nominalizations).
openaire   +2 more sources

Multifaceted body parts in Murui

2020
Abstract Based on the firsthand data from Murui, a Witotoan language spoken in the Northwest Amazon, the study demonstrates how the body part terms ‘back’, ‘face’, ‘mouth, and ‘body’ grammaticalized into the domains covering spatial orientation, time, comparison, counting, and the reflexive. Murui body part nouns did not grammaticalize in isolation; to
openaire   +2 more sources

The phonological and grammatical status of Murui ‘word’

2020
Different sorts of phonological and grammatical criteria can be used to identify wordhood in Murui, a Witotoan language from Northwest Amazonia. A phonological word is determined on entirely phonological principles. Its key indicators include prosody (stress) and segmental phonology (vowel length).
openaire   +2 more sources

Links between language and society among the Murui of north-west Amazonia

2021
Murui, a Witototan language spoken in southern Colombia and northern Peru, has at its disposal a number of linguistic features that mirror the structure of the Murui society, the Murui belief system, the environment the Murui people live in, and their means of subsistence. Demonstrable associations between linguistic and non-linguistic features (the so-
openaire   +1 more source

Escaping from Casa Arana: The Murui-Muina Nation after the Amazon Rubber Boom

Ethnohistory
Abstract The Amazon rubber boom (1850–1930) devastated Indigenous nations that had remained for centuries at the borders of European empires and the nation-states that replaced them in South America. The arrival of the Peruvian rubber company Casa Arana to the Igaraparaná and Caraparaná Rivers in 1899 marked the conquest and colonization
openaire   +1 more source

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