Results 201 to 210 of about 25,422 (239)

Fijian Reduplication

open access: yesFijian Reduplication
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Reduplicative paramnesia

Neurology, 1976
A striking behavioral abnormality is described in three individuals who had severe head trauma. At a point when general mnestic capabilities had returned to a near normal level, the patients persistently relocated the hospital at another geographical site, even in the face of compelling counter-evidence.
D F, Benson, H, Gardner, J C, Meadows
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Minimal reduplication and reduplicative exponence

Morphology, 2013
This paper presents Minimal Reduplication, a theory which analyzes reduplication as an emergent phenomenon. The theory is discussed with special focus on the area of morphophonology. Key claims and architecture are discussed in some detail. Finally a case study of a complex set of reduplicative data is considered in order to illustrate the utility of ...
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Delayed reduplicative paramnesia

Neurology, 1987
A 25-year-old man with a remote history of closed head injury and left hemiparesis developed the false belief that his hospital was located in another city, close to his home. This delusion appeared more than 3 years after his injury, from which he had made a good recovery. No previous delusional or other psychotic thinking had occurred.
C M, Filley, P E, Jarvis
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PHENOMENON OF REDUPLICATION

Archives of Neurology And Psychiatry, 1952
IN STUDIES of the behavior of patients with organic brain disease the phenomena of reduplication for place, person, and time have been observed. Reduplication for place may be defined as the confabulation of the existence of two or more places with almost identical attributes, although only one exists in reality.
E A, WEINSTEIN, R L, KAHN, L A, SUGARMAN
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Reduplication

2005
This groundbreaking new study takes a novel approach to reduplication, a phenomenon whereby languages use repetition to create new words. Sharon Inkelas and Cheryl Zoll argue that the driving force in reduplication is identity at the morphosyntactic, not the phonological level, and present a new model of reduplication - Morphological Doubling Theory ...
Sharon Inkelas, Cheryl Zoll
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Cystic Duct Reduplication

JAMA, 1961
PLINYin 31 B. C. first recorded mention of a double gallbladder in an animal sacrificed during the celebration of Augustus' victory over Antony and Cleopatra.1Boyden2and Lee3each pointed out that congenital abnormalities of the gallbladder and the biliary ducts are found much more commonly in domestic animals, notably cats and cattle, than in humans ...
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Reduplication

2006
AbstractReduplication is the doubling of some part of a morphological constituent (root, stem, word) for some morphological purpose. Reduplication has long been a topic of intense interest for morphological and phonological theory alike. From the morphological perspective, reduplication poses a challenge for item‑based theories of morphology because of
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