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First language acquisition differs from second language acquisition in prelingually deaf signers: Evidence from sensitivity to grammaticality judgement in British Sign Language
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Lexicalisation and de-lexicalisation processes in sign languages: Comparing depicting constructions and viewpoint gestures
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44 |
Variable "subject" presence in Australian Sign Language and New Zealand Sign Language
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Challenges in lemmatising signed language digital video corpora: the measure of lexical frequency in Australian and British signed languages
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51 |
Variation, lexicalization and grammaticalization in signed languages
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Sociolinguistic variation in British, Australian and New Zealand sign languages
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53 |
Sociolinguistic variation in British, Australian and New Zealand sign languages
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In: Sign Languages, pp. 479-501 (2010)
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54 |
Documenting sign languages
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In: Language Documentation and Description Volume 7: Lectures in Language Documentation and Description, pp. 105-143 (2010)
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Issues in creating annotation standards for sign language description
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In: Proceedings of the 4th Workshop on the Representation and Processing of Sign Languages: Corpora and Sign Language Technologies, pp. 212-216 (2010)
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56 |
Variation, lexicalization and grammaticalization in signed languages
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In: Langage et société, n 131, 1, 2010-03-11, pp.19-35 (2010)
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58 |
The Use of space with indicating verbs in Auslan : a corpus-based investigation
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Phonological variation and change in Australian and New Zealand sign languages : the location variable
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Abstract:
In this study, we consider variation in a class of signs in Australian and New Zealand Sign Languages that includes the signs think, name, and clever. In their citation form, these signs are specified for a place of articulation at or near the signer's forehead or above, but are sometimes produced at lower locations. An analysis of 2667 tokens collected from 205 deaf signers in five sites across Australia and of 2096 tokens collected from 138 deaf signers from three regions in New Zealand indicates that location variation in these signs reflects both linguistic and social factors, as also reported for American Sign Language (Lucas, Bayley, & Valli, 2001). Despite similarities, however, we find that some of the particular factors at work, and the kinds of influence they have, appear to differ in these three signed languages. Moreover, our results suggest that lexical frequency may also play a role. ; 39 page(s)
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Keyword:
200400 Linguistics
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/46826
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British Sign Language corpus Project : Open access archives and the observer's Paradox
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In: Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on the Representation and Processing of Signed Languages : Construction and Exploitation of Sign Language Corpora. International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation. , pp. 165-169 (2008)
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