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Signs of Globalization: ASL Influence in the Lexicon of New Zealand Sign Language ...
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Sign language interpreting in the Pacific: a snapshot of progress in raising the participation of deaf people ...
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Sign language interpreting in the Pacific: a snapshot of progress in raising the participation of deaf people ...
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Folk Definitions as a Model for Sign Language Dictionary Definitions: A User-Focused Study of the Online Dictionary of New Zealand Sign Language
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Ka puāwai ngā kōhungahunga turi: a study of the nature and impacts of early intervention for Māori deaf children and their whānau
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Making an Online Dictionary of New Zealand Sign Language
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In: Lexikos. Journal of the African Association for Lexicography 23 (2013), 500-531
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IDS OBELEX meta
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Making an Online Dictionary of New Zealand Sign Language
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In: Lexikos; Vol. 23 (2013) ; 2224-0039 (2013)
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Variable "subject" presence in Australian Sign Language and New Zealand Sign Language
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Abstract:
This article reports the findings of parallel studies of variable subject presence in two closely related sign language varieties, Australian Sign Language (Auslan) and New Zealand Sign Language (NZSL). The studies expand upon research in American Sign Language (ASL) (Wulf, Dudis, Bayley, & Lucas, 2002) that found subject pronouns with nonintlecting verbs to be more frequently unexpressed than expressed. The ASL study reported that null subject use correlates with both social and linguistic factors, the strongest of which is referential congruence with an antecedent in a preceding clause. Findings from the Auslan and NZSL studies also indicated that chains of reference play a stronger role in subject presence than either morphological factors (e.g., verb type), or social factors of age, gender, ethnicity, and language background. Overall results are consistent with the view that this feature of syntactic variation may be better accounted for in terms of information structure than sociolinguistic effects. ; 24 page(s)
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Keyword:
200400 Linguistics
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/162292
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Sign language interpreting : theory and practice in Australia and New Zealand
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Sociolinguistic variation in British, Australian and New Zealand sign languages
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