Contact and Language Change: Using the Present to Explain the Past1
Abstract Although we may know the outcome of language changes that could have resulted from language contact in the past, we are unlikely to know how and why these changes occurred unless we also know about the individual speakers who came into contact and the nature of their interactions—information that all too often is impossible to uncover.
Jenny Cheshire
wiley +1 more source
CAFE: Spontaneous code-switching speech dataset in Algerian dialect, French and English. [PDF]
Lachemat HE +5 more
europepmc +1 more source
The effects of genres on the development of multifaceted linguistic complexity in Chinese learners of German: A longitudinal corpus analysis. [PDF]
Li Y, Li Y.
europepmc +1 more source
Text and picture integration during bridging information processing: A comparison of English and Chinese L1 and L2 speakers. [PDF]
Zhang C, Tsimpli I, Schmidt E.
europepmc +1 more source
MDER-MA: A multimodal dataset for emotion recognition in low-resource Moroccan Arabic language. [PDF]
Ouali S, Garouani SE.
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The effect of linguistic detail in police interview transcripts on perceptions of an interviewee
TOMPKINSON, James, Haworth, Kate
openaire +2 more sources
Word recognition during movement under simulated weather conditions. [PDF]
Rocabado F +2 more
europepmc +1 more source
Narratorial Techniques in Tunisian Police and Court Transcripts: A Forensic Linguistic Approach
openaire +1 more source

