Results 61 to 70 of about 101 (101)

Marc L. Greenberg, “Prekmurje Slovene Grammar”: Avgust Pavel’s Vend Nyelvtan (1942) [Critical edition and translation from Hungarian, Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics, Volume 47] (Brill; Leiden, 2020), 215 pp.

open access: yesMarc L. Greenberg, “Prekmurje Slovene Grammar”: Avgust Pavel’s Vend Nyelvtan (1942) [Critical edition and translation from Hungarian, Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics, Volume 47] (Brill; Leiden, 2020), 215 pp.
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A Web Service Implementation of Linguistic Annotation for Slovene and English

2012
This record contains a full paper presented at the 8th Conference on Language Technologies (JT-2012), held in Ljubljana, Slovenia, in October 2012.
Pollak, Senja   +3 more
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Accelerated Grammatical Change in Carinthian Slovene: Dialect Mixture or “Linguistic Decay”?

Canadian Slavonic Papers, 1988
a number of ways. Extralinguistically, there are the three usual 'planes' of variation: (1) spatial ('dialectal') variation one of the first things the visiting linguist is told is that "puwsoad u Sealax marwaj darhao" ("people talk differently everywhere in Sele"); (2) chronological variation the different generations speak in obviously different ways;
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Slovene Language after the Schengen Agreement: Will the Linguistic Borders Also Disappear?

2016
On 21 December 2007, I happened to drive to Vienna. The border crossing at Sentilj, which used to be one of the busiest in Slovenia, was empty, no cars queuing for inspection. Because of the early hour, it was still dark and there were no controls either side of the border.
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Slovene in the linguistic landscape of Austrian Carinthia: Utopical re-appropriation 50 years after the "Ortstafelsturm"?

2023
Austrian Carinthia has recently marked two important anniversaries regarding Slovene as a minority language. The first one was the 100th anniversary of the 1920 plebiscite, after which a major part of historical Carinthia became part of the Republic of Austria and Carinthian Slovenes were divided from other Slovenes south of the border.
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Linguistic landscape as a mirror: the case of the Slovene minority in Italy:

2016
Linguistic landscape studies represent a new approach in the research on multilingualism based on the analysis of the language(s) in signs. Linguistic landscape refers to linguistic objects marking the public space. The language used in writing reflects the status and social use of languages.
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Psychological Functioning of Slovene Adults during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Does Resilience Matter?

Psychiatric Quarterly, 2020
Tina Kavčič   +2 more
exaly  

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