Lucy was taught by studio linguists to speak in a mid-century, mid-Atlantic accent. |
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Biologists and linguists agree that language is an important species-specific property. |
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Languages are becoming extinct at an alarming rate which makes language endangerment the area of the greatest current concern to linguists. |
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This project involved several Chinook Jargon speakers and linguists translating the letter from their own perspectives. |
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In the latter significance the term is often used by linguists, and in some of the chrestomathies issued by them in recent years. |
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It's too bad that linguists who study syntax, semantics and pragmatics have not been involved in this enterprise to any significant extent. |
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This is how what linguists term pragmatic markers have arisen in languages worldwide. |
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A special typographical challenge that linguists face is the formatting of our beloved example sentences with interlinear glossing. |
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In their explanations of graphology, linguists often find it useful to draw parallels between this system and the system of spoken language. |
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Since Sapir, linguists have linked the Na-Dene languages to Asian languages, but their work is not conclusive. |
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But until recently, when linguists like David Kelley were able to translate Mayan glyphs, we knew very little about the Mayans. |
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Historians and linguists argue about its etymology, but it was possibly used as a folk name referring to northern territories. |
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The whole question is fascinating, because generative linguists have not tended to be interested in this question. |
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Some linguists predict that if nothing is done, almost all Aboriginal languages will be dead within the next decade. |
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Nonetheless, linguists ain't just whistling Dixie when they say there are no linguistic limits to the number of coordinates. |
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Origin of Kashmiri language has been a topic of debate among linguists and scholars for a long period of time. |
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Composers, linguists, wordsmiths, poets, and all those in a creative sphere are all in their own way pursuing happiness and fulfillment. |
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But we also don't call them finite complement clauses, though many linguists would. |
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While some British and Anglophile linguists denigrated American English as provincial and corrupt, Webster inverted the argument. |
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Napoleon has with him scholars, including antiquarians and linguists, whose job it is to unravel the mysteries of ancient Egypt. |
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If the Brigade had more Arabic linguists, the Army would have deployed them to use their language skills. |
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Contract linguists, many of them native speakers, were quickly hired as well, but problems with them persist. |
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So why don't they just go out and, y'know, hire some sharp young linguists? |
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And because of increased force projection requirements, the need for skilled linguists is growing. |
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Some linguists classify the Gullah language, spoken in the North Carolina islands, as a pidgin that is based on West African syntax. |
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Some linguists have expressed concern that learning a foreign language too early may impact unfavourably on learners' native tongue acquisition. |
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Thus, linguists have usually treated language as an abstract object which can be accounted for without reference to social concerns of any kind. |
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But it's shocking that linguistics and linguists haven't been celebrated in the titles of music and films. |
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These categories, he says, are imposed because the languages that western linguists are familiar with have them. |
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The handler was displaying the usual slippage between folk conceptions of language and we linguists ' conceptions of same. |
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Especially during the heyday of Bloomfieldian structuralism, linguists were scathing of conceptual definitions of word classes. |
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Ever since then, linguists have found all sorts of evidence that these far-flung languages must have sprung from some common source. |
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But language is defined by linguists as more than just the use of symbols, whether vocalized or not. |
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Languages are becoming extinct, and many have never been studied by linguists. |
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However, many linguists think he chose cognate terms too broadly to bolster his reconstruction. |
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The site is more of a browsing expedition than a tool for linguists and logophiles, but then the first word in the name is fun and not research. |
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I want to suggest that this is in fact a rather useful rule of thumb for linguists and philologists. |
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I'm now involved, with a number of linguists, in a project I helped to organize to explore very distant relationships among human languages. |
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Cambodian, or Khmer, is classified by linguists as an Austro-Asiatic language, related to Mon. |
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It is significant that many linguists have sought to limit the role of polysemy in linguistic semantics, if not to eliminate it altogether. |
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My friends, being incredibly nerdy linguists, decided to make fun of the syntax. |
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Additionally, a 12-week language-conversion course converts Russian linguists to Serbo-Croatian linguists. |
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The Army needs these linguists trained and mission ready, maintaining their perishable language skills. |
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Descriptive linguists try to lay out a statement of what the conditions are for particular languages. |
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Arabic documents are mistranslated by the few overworked linguists, substantially delaying investigations. |
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This book will be a valuable resource for typologists and general linguists alike. |
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The fact is those linguists who are engaged in real intelligence missions requiring their language skills are better qualified. |
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The result is a bound phrase, in the parlance of linguists, that takes its meaning from the context in which it is used. |
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It seems likely that the intuition of linguists is that speech sounds just sound discretely different. |
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Rather than choose constant code-switching without translation into English, she simply allows in her writing what linguists call interference. |
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There's definitely such a thing as a syntactic error, even in your native language, even as judged by descriptive linguists. |
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It provides rich information for historical linguists as to how vulgar Latin was evolving. |
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Scotland Yard is also recruiting linguists, notably those who speak Middle Eastern languages. |
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There is not total agreement among linguists about the stress-timed nature of English. |
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This does not deny the importance of work by linguists on problems of orthography. |
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The articles also address current issues in linguistic theory so that Celticists and theoretical linguists alike find this book valuable. |
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Some linguists claim that it is a back vowel, others argue that it is a central vowel. |
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I no longer trust my own subjective impressions, or those of other linguists, no matter how reputable. |
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There are about 24 Dravidian languages recognized by linguists. |
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The concept of communication is the true quest of the Geminian, and sun sign depictions dwell on their talents as teachers, diplomats, interpreters, linguists, etc. |
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In 1969 two linguists, brent Berlin and Paul Kay, found that color terms nearly always enter languages in the same order. |
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Many linguists argue instead that language arose independently of music. |
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In this context, anthropological linguists working on southeastern Indian languages and cultures will have reservations about his untutored approach to semantic analysis. |
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The linguists would argue that these were Nilotic language speakers, and that they were immediate neighbours of another language group known as East Saheliens. |
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Meanwhile, I am glad that I am fodder for computational linguists. |
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However, all phoneticians and linguists agree that the widely held view that many accents are corruptions of a pure pronunciation has no scientific basis whatsoever. |
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The imperfections of polysemy analyses have not deterred computational linguists from attempting to devise algorithms for disambiguation and sense selection. |
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The responses of writers and scholars to his work have varied, journalists tending towards praise and even adulation, academic linguists towards caution and even reproof. |
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Surely even the best linguists have to translate first into their own language, then formulate a response and then change that back into the language in question. |
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This explosion of linguistic novelty has sent linguists reeling, a bit. |
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When linguists set up sets of words for lexical comparison, whether for classical subgrouping or for lexicostatistics, they are typically arranged by glosses. |
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I hope these examples are useful to linguists who are studying this topic. |
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In a sense, we are border semioticians and vernacular linguists. |
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If applied linguists were to take these accounts more seriously, applied linguistics might contribute more directly to improving the human condition. |
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The Chickasaw language is still so similar to Choctaw, for instance, that linguists surmise that the separation of the two could not have occurred very long ago. |
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One reason historical linguists are skeptical of this claim is that it's so easy to find languages in which personal pronouns have undergone a lot of change. |
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With Scotland now well established as a location for inward investment, McWalter maintains there is now a larger pool of talented linguists available. |
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The cabin crew had been specially selected for the flight and amongst these hostesses were nurses and linguists fluent in French, Spanish and Italian. |
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In a sense, ironic circumstances seem to be still bird-dogging the Klitschko brothers whether these fluent linguists are speaking English, German, Russian or Ukrainian. |
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This is just as true among linguists, alas, as it is among literary types. |
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Stephen, who said he has tried his hand at German, Latin and Classical Greek, is fluent in Esperanto and holds regular meetings at his home for fellow linguists. |
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Some linguists have collected large corpora of written or spoken samples of a language, their frequency lists and studies of data made easier by computational processing. |
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It is therefore a challenge to applied linguists to see how education systems can contribute to the promotion of more just multilingual societies. |
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The volume caters not only to Semiticists but also to general linguists, in that all examples are provided with interlinear transcription. |
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Recently a number of linguists have argued that many of the grammar changes observed in English were due to a Brythonic influence. |
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However, these theories remain highly controversial, not being accepted by most linguists in the field. |
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Each of these dialects is almost unintelligible to the speakers of the other, and are considered by some linguists to be separate languages. |
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Kutchi is often referred to as a dialect of Gujarati, but most linguists consider it closer to Sindhi. |
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One of the few moments linguists can detect somewhat of a revolution is when the Dutch standard language emerged and quickly established itself. |
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From a strictly synchronic point of view, however, some linguists classify Dutch Low Saxon as a variety of Dutch. |
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Officially the number of North Frisian speakers ranges from 8,000 to 10,000 but linguists propose significantly lower numbers. |
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For this reason, linguists classify Mandan most often as a separate branch of the Siouan family. |
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In addition, Albanian has also been considered somewhat related to Greek and Armenian by some linguists. |
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However, this etymology for spill the beans has been questioned by linguists. |
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The position that Costa Rican linguists support depends upon which University they represent. |
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Many historical linguists view any speech form as a dialect of the older medium of communication from which it developed. |
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Some linguists use the terms diphthong and triphthong only in this phonemic sense. |
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We cited a goodly number of synonyms, some of them may seem superfluous, but I thought of linguists interested in phytonymy. |
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Some historians and linguists consider Dacian language to be a dialect of or the same language as Thracian. |
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Some linguists claim that mutual intelligibility is, ideally at least, the primary criterion separating languages from dialects. |
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General consensus among linguists is that the Dutch language has 28 main dialects. |
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Rask influenced many later linguists, and in particular Karl Verner carried on his inquiries into comparative and historical linguistics. |
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After the deaths of the Grimm Brothers, successive linguists continued the work. |
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The origin of the name Tabasco is not definitively known, with a number of theories debated among linguists. |
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It should be noted that many of these alleged dialects are widely viewed by linguists as separate languages. |
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There are many examples where linguists fail to agree whether a given rule is inflection or word formation. |
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Lexical aspect is sometimes called Aktionsart, especially by German and Slavic linguists. |
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Dixon acknowledges that this excludes some constructions labeled as passive by some linguists. |
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Another important figure in the Prague school was Roman Jakobson, who was one of the most prominent linguists of the 20th century. |
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Different linguists therefore take different approaches to the problem of assigning sounds to phonemes. |
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For linguists, grammar refers to cognitive information underlying language use. |
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At the same time, linguists have begun to come to the realization that creole languages are in no way inferior to other languages. |
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Such a separation of loanwords into two distinct categories is not used by linguists in English in talking about any language. |
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However, a number of linguists have recently argued that language change lies with the individual. |
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In contrast, linguists such as Steven Pinker argue that ideas exist independently of language. |
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This distinction is not made by some linguists and does not appear in most dictionaries. |
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Some linguists have observed phonetic consequences of vowel reduction that go beyond the pronunciation of the vowel itself. |
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Recently, historical linguists have started to study earlier Canadian English on historical linguistic data. |
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It is sometimes colloquially referred to as Ebonics, a term that is avoided by linguists because of its other meanings and connotations. |
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The term common name is not much used to contrast with proper name, but some linguists have used the term for that purpose. |
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This trait of phrasal verbs is also what makes them interesting for linguists, since they appear to defy the principle of compositionality. |
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Information structure has been described at length by a number of linguists as a grammatical phenomenon. |
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However even corpus linguists who work with 'unannotated plain text' inevitably apply some method to isolate salient terms. |
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By sharing data, corpus linguists are able to treat the corpus as a locus of linguistic debate, rather than as an exhaustive fount of knowledge. |
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However, historical linguists have never found a derivation with which they are universally comfortable. |
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Human population geneticists and historical linguists are also providing valuable insight for these questions. |
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When Harry and I went to Central Australia, we met linguists in the Tanami desert who sat down with Warlpiri people to compile a dictionary. |
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Some linguists are of the opinion that there is a connection here with mesel, an archaic term for a leper, but this has yet to be proven. |
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Words that linguists call function words are unconsciously produced by people. |
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Here North American and European linguists consider sonority in the contexts of phonotactics, phonetics, language acquisition, sign language, and computational modeling. |
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Hence, this book can be very useful for a wide range of researchers, including specialists on Votic or other Finnic languages, general linguists and typologists. |
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Unfortunately, most of the Balkanian intellectuals, politicians, and linguists who could agree to give their common language one name are brainwashed nationalists. |
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Commands must give their linguists every opportunity to succeed, and then honestly assess the retainability of the Soldier with deference to the Soldier's overall performance. |
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Although the reason for this is not clear, some linguists have attributed this phenomenon to the laterization of the part of the brain that is used for language acquisition. |
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Estuary English shares many features with Cockney, and there is some debate among linguists as to where Cockney speech ends and Estuary English begins. |
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Alastair Pennycook, Suresh Canagarajah, Adrian Holliday and Julian Edge broadly fall into this group and are often described as critical applied linguists. |
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These exceptions defied linguists for a few decades, but eventually received explanation from Danish linguist Karl Verner in the form of Verner's law. |
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The Canary Islands had an indigenous population called the Guanches whose origin is still the subject of discussion among historians and linguists. |
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Another kind of parallelism used is referred to by modern linguists as difrasismo, in which two phrases are symbolically combined to give a metaphorical reading. |
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When Nahuatl became the subject of focused linguistic studies in the 20th century, linguists acknowledged the need to represent all the phonemes of the language. |
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Given the process of marginalization combined with the trend of migration to urban areas and to the United States, some linguists are warning of impending language death. |
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Beckwith's second problem is with linguists and lexicographers of Chinese. |
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The Karelian language is closely related to the Finnish language, and by some Finnish and Karelian linguists is viewed as a dialect of Finnish language. |
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Several linguists have made use of Gothic as a creative language. |
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Over the years, it has done much to promote the language, with its sports commentators coining new terms which later became accepted by Welsh linguists. |
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Both linguists and language enthusiasts searched out the last native speakers during the 20th century, recording their speech and learning from them. |
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Albanian is often seen as the descendant of Illyrian, although this hypothesis has been challenged by some linguists, who maintain that it derives from Dacian or Thracian. |
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What is generally agreed upon by linguists is that Cumbric was a Western Brittonic language closely related to Welsh and, more distantly, to Cornish and Breton. |
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The term was derived from its use for Insular script, first cited by the OED in 1908, and is also used for the group of Insular Celtic languages by linguists. |
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This idea has been very actively challenged by a number of linguists. |
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