Morgan argues that forcing organization theory into lexicons, literal language and precise formulations is a retrograde step. |
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Particularly in the eighteenth century lexicons were infinitely lively, full of satire, poetry and provocations. |
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Pop-cultural lexicons are moving towards a type of modulated system based on versional directed traffic. |
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That of course is where Greek lexicons like those referenced to above are helpful. |
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Critically, Morton and Patterson assumed distinct orthographic and phonological lexicons that contain no conceptual knowledge. |
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The publication of French dictionaries and lexicons by Enlightenment scholars further eroded regionalisms. |
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Every word of these texts is tagged, lemmatized, and hypertext-linked to the Liddell-Scott, Louw-Nida, Friberg, Thayer, or Barclay-Newman lexicons. |
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These approaches have quite different origins in artificial intelligence and linguistics, and involve corpus input, lexicons and knowledge bases in quite different ways. |
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After years of exaggerating the snow-vocabulary of arctic peoples, suddenly journalists everywhere are obsessed with the allegedly gaping holes in northland lexicons. |
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We have also acquired a controlling interest in the lexicons of both Armenian and Uzbeck, as well as a minority shareholding in several obscure Romance dialects. |
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There was little original research, but many lexicons, anthologies, encyclopedias, and commentaries. |
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Numerous such agricultural products retain their native names in the English and Spanish lexicons. |
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Resembling the moose he describes, Thoreau meandered through lexicons, munching etymologies like some great verbivorous animal. |
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They can involve words being marked with various morphemes as well as nearly entirely different lexicons being used based on the social status of the interactants. |
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Formalism seeks to correct this deficiency by translating verbal texts into formal, mathematizable lexicons which are then manipulated into general propositions. |
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