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Radical Recognition in Off-Line Handwritten Chinese Characters Using Non-Negative Matrix Factorization
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In: Senior Projects Spring 2016 (2016)
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Do native speakers of North American and Singapore English differentially perceive comprehensibility in second language speech?
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Second language speech production: investigating linguistic correlates of comprehensibility and accentedness for learners at different ability levels
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Flawed self-assessment: investigating self- and other-perception of second language speech
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Differential effects of instruction on the development of second language comprehensibility, word Stress, rhythm, and intonation: the case of inexperienced Japanese EFL learners
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Multilingual couples' disagreement : Taiwanese partners and their foreign spouses
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Lexical correlates of comprehensibility versus accentedness in second language speech
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16 |
Transnational experience, aspiration and family language policy
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Foreign accentedness revisited: Canadian and Singaporean raters’ perception of Japanese-accented English
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18 |
Prosody beyond pitch and emotion in speech and music: evidence from right hemisphere brain damage and congenital amusia
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19 |
Development of Comprehensibility and its Linguistic Correlates: A Longitudinal Study of Video-Mediated Telecollaboration
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The linguistic landscape of Chinatown: a sociolinguistic ethnography
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Abstract:
This book presents a sociolinguistic ethnography of the linguistic landscape of Chinatown in Washington, DC. The book sheds a unique light on the impact of urban development on traditionally ethnic neighbourhoods and discusses the various historical, social and cultural factors that contribute to this area’s shifting linguistic landscape. Based on fieldwork, interviews with residents and visitors and analysis of community meetings and public policies, it provides an in-depth study of the production and consumption of linguistic landscape as a cultural text. Following a geosemiotic analysis of shop signs, it traces the multiple historical trajectories of discourse which shaped the bilingual landscape of the neighbourhood. Turning to the spatial contexts, it then compares and contrasts the situated meaning of the linguistic landscape for residents, community organisers and urban planners.
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Keyword:
Applied Linguistics and Communication (to 2020)
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URL: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/26879/ http://www.multilingual-matters.com/display.asp?K=9781783095629
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