Results 91 to 100 of about 13,108 (236)
Why "consciousness" means what it does. [PDF]
“Consciousness” seems to be a polysemic, ambiguous, term. Because of this, theorists have sought to distinguish the different kinds of phenomena that “consciousness” denotes, leading to a proliferation of terms for different kinds of consciousness ...
Manson, Neil C.
core +1 more source
New Insights Into Lakota Syntax: The Encoding of Arguments and the Number of Verbal Affixes
ABSTRACT This paper examines the morphosyntax of transitive constructions in Lakota, with particular emphasis being placed on the encoding of arguments. The analysis of argument marking through verbal affixes in Lakota transitive constructions raises two main questions: the existence or non‐existence of the zero marker for the third person singular and
Avelino Corral Esteban
wiley +1 more source
Parts, Axial Parts, and Next Parts in Kannada
Nouns meaning ‘place, region’ and ‘part’ are compounded in Kannada with a `bleached’ noun (a putative postposition) to form AxPart and Part readings. As in other languages, the AxPart or ‘region’ reading does not pluralize, does not permit adjectival ...
R. Amritavalli
doaj +1 more source
Identifying neuropathologic disease in primary progressive aphasia using narrative speech
Abstract INTRODUCTION We present an application of artificial intelligence to narrative speech with the primary objective of predicting neuropathologic disease underlying primary progressive aphasia (PPA). METHODS Using natural language processing toolkits, features were extracted from transcribed narratives of the Cinderella story.
Daniel B. Gutstein +12 more
wiley +1 more source
Gotų kalbos bevardės giminės būdvardžių galūnių kaita | Inflectional variation in Gothic neuter adjectives [PDF]
This article examines the evidence of morphological variation in the inflection of neuter nominative and accusative singular adjectives as well as other modifiers in Gothic (shorter nominal vs.
Artūras Ratkus
doaj
Does Turkish child-directed speech predict the acquisition order of wh-questions? [PDF]
Does Turkish child-directed speech predict the acquisition order of wh-questions? The very early studies about children’s acquisition of questions have provided a cognition-based rationale. They claimed that “why” and “when” are acquired later than “what”
Akyol, Ozden, Altinkamis, Feyza
core
Indigenous ways of sharing and developing knowledge survive in ceremony, songs, proverbs, storytelling and purposeful dialogues. Wānanga (space for knowledge sharing) is the epitome of traditional knowledge transmission—grounded in Indigenous practice and worldview, allowing for the co‐creation of new knowledge and passing down of inherited knowledge ...
Deborah Heke +3 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Languages differ in how words carve up the world into categories, and these differences in lexical categories often influence how speakers interpret perceived events. Past research has shown that languages with a single and general word for one domain tend to cue attention more broadly than languages with multiple, more specific verbs.
Hiromichi Hagihara +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Structures with Noun Predicative Actants in Romanian
This article discusses one of the types of structures with predicative actants: those actants that manifest predicative actants expressed by nouns with verbal value, as well as the actantial structures organized by the nouns with verbal value. It should be mentioned that in the specialized literature these nouns are known as verb nominalisations, being
openaire +1 more source
McDowell and Sellars on Objective Purport
Abstract John McDowell has criticized Wilfrid Sellars on several occasions and over a number of years for his ‘non‐relational’ account of intentionality. This account is, according to McDowell, at least partly responsible for a ‘blind spot’ in Sellars's thinking: Sellars, allegedly, fails to see how objects or states of affairs in the external world ...
Stefan Brandt
wiley +1 more source

