4,501 to 4,510 of 4,519 Results
Jun 16, 2014 -
Why Russian Prefixes Aren’t Empty
Plain Text - 96.5 KB -
MD5: 7e204860460fb3d016f3c453249ecbf3
Aspectual Triplets: An aspectual triplet is a set of three verbs, consisting of a simplex verb, a prefixed Natural Perfective, and a secondary imperfective derived via suffixation of the Natural Perfective. All three verbs have the same lexical meaning and the members of a tripl... |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: Russian nu-drop verbs
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 2.0 MB -
MD5: 8c66b2eada8d0d23f64fe36c269c371d
Perfective Gerunds from -eret' verbs in Russian |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: Russian nu-drop verbs
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 27.3 MB -
MD5: 9964000eecfc1d5dd26254dccb658b07
Nu-drop database |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: Introducing pressure for expressivity into language evolution experiments
Plain Text - 39.0 KB -
MD5: 38fbf5130df26e48f64d153591f8a069
Results of a language evolution experiment |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: V-temporal adverbials in Slavic
Unknown - 284.6 KB -
MD5: a043400bcddd91ffa386f6d03cd1bf97
The database for the cited publication |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: V-temporal adverbials in Slavic
Plain Text - 61.5 KB -
MD5: 33258e908be021fcb1ccb4f38cee475b
The database for statistical analysis |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: V-temporal adverbials in Slavic
Plain Text - 2.9 KB -
MD5: 3eff738341c6b7f07b5143cf75ce9971
R script used for the analysis: Principle Components |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Replication data for: Slangs go online, or the rise and fall of the Olbanian language
Plain Text - 22.8 KB -
MD5: 4a1bb6a85ed1769a6c7085102e55fcd9
Results of a diachronic study of a Russian internet slang |
Jun 16, 2014 -
Russian -n'ki words
Unknown - 98.1 KB -
MD5: 251b536b88e543cf93ee8514ce908839
Russian words ending in -n'ki (the bain'ki 'sleep' type) |
Jun 13, 2014 -
Metonymy in Word-Formation: Russian, Czech, and Norwegian
MS Excel Spreadsheet - 282.5 KB -
MD5: b3abaf47f0d2709306156a28f7298e72
Charts based on the data in the databases. R=Russian, C=Czech, N=Norwegian, P&G refers to the study by Peirsman and Geeraerts 2006 cited in the article. met des = metonymy designation (how many metonymy patterns a suffix has) |