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1
Kinship Systems: Change and Reconstruction
McConvell, Patrick; Keen, Ian; Hendery, Rachel. - : University of Utah Press, 2022
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2
A Grammar of Gurindji : As spoken by Violet Wadrill, Ronnie Wavehill, Dandy Danbayarri, Biddy Wavehill, Topsy Dodd Ngarnjal, Long Johnny Kijngayarri, Banjo Ryan, Pincher Nyurrmiari and Blanche Bulngari
Meakins, Felicity [Verfasser]; McConvell, Patrick [Verfasser]. - Berlin : de Gruyter Mouton, 2021
DNB Subject Category Language
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3
A Grammar of Gurindji : As spoken by Violet Wadrill, Ronnie Wavehill, Dandy Danbayarri, Biddy Wavehill, Topsy Dodd Ngarnjal, Long Johnny Kijngayarri, Banjo Ryan, Pincher Nyurrmiari and Blanche Bulngari
Meakins, Felicity; McConvell, Patrick; De Gruyter Mouton. - Berlin : de Gruyter Mouton, 2021
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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4
CLDF dataset derived from Bowern et al.'s "Hunter - Gatherer Language Database" from 2021 ...
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5
CLDF dataset derived from Bowern et al.'s "Hunter - Gatherer Language Database" from 2021 ...
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6
The language of hunter-gatherers
Güldemann, Tom (Herausgeber); McConvell, Patrick (Herausgeber); Rhodes, Richard A. (Herausgeber). - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2020
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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7
Enhancing the Kinship Anthropology of Scheffler with Diachronic Linguistics and Centricity
McConvell, Patrick. - : ANU Press, 2020
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8
Waves of words: Ancient Asia-Pacific connection with North Australia ...
Hendery, Rachel; McConvell, Patrick. - : Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies, 2018
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9
Waves of words: Ancient Asia-Pacific connection with North Australia
Hendery, Rachel; McConvell, Patrick. - : Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies, 2018
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10
Waves of words : ancient Asia-Pacific connection with North Australia
Hendery, Rachel (R17913); McConvell, Patrick. - : N.Z., The Macmillan Brown Centre for Pacific Studies, 2017
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11
What is ‘Kariera’? : detecting systems and overlap in Australian kinship using the AustKin database
McConvell, Patrick; Hendery, Rachel (R17913). - : Richmond, Vic., Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia, 2017
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12
Language and culture history : the contribution of linguistic
In: The Routledge handbook of language and culture (London, 2015), p. 209-224
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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13
Wanderwörter in languages of the Americas and Australia
In: Ampersand (2015)
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14
Granny got cross: semantic change of kami 'mother's mother' to 'father's mother' in Pama-Nyungan
McConvell, Patrick. - : Walter de Gruyter, 2015
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15
Does Lateral Transmission Obscure Inheritance in Hunter-Gatherer Languages?
In: PLoS ONE (2015)
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16
Grand-daddy morphs: the importance of suffixes in reconstructing Pama-Nyungan kinship
McConvell, Patrick. - : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2015
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17
Grand-daddy morphs: the importance of suffixes in reconstructing Pama-Nyungan kinship
McConvell, Patrick. - : John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2015
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18
Granny got cross: semantic change of kami 'mother's mother' to 'father's mother' in Pama-Nyungan
McConvell, Patrick. - : Walter de Gruyter, 2015
BASE
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19
Does Lateral Transmission Obscure Inheritance in Hunter-Gatherer Languages?
In: PLoS ONE (2015)
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20
Wanderwörter in languages of the Americas and Australia
In: Ampersand (2015)
Abstract: Wanderwörter are a problematic set of words in historical linguistics. They usually make up a small proportion of the total vocabulary of individual languages, and only a minority of loanwords. They are, however, found frequently in languages from across the world. There is, to our knowledge, no general synthesis of Wanderwörter patterns, causes of exceptionally high borrowing rates for particular lexical items, or estimates of their frequency across language families. Claims about the causes of their spread exist, but have not been widely tested. Nor, despite researchers’ intuitions that Wanderwörter form a distinct type of borrowing, is there a clear demonstration that Wanderwörter are, in fact, different from other loanwords in any concrete way. In the present paper, we examine the phenomenon of Wanderwörter using a standard sample of vocabulary in languages of Australia, North America and South America. The investigation presented here examines Wanderwörter in great enough detail to answer questions about the linguistic and social processes by which Wanderwörter migrate as well as the shapes and densities of the resulting networks. We show that Wanderwörter can be categorically distinguished from other borrowing. The study of Wanderwörter to date has focused on agricultural or industrialized societies; however, the phenomenon is well attested in networks of smaller languages. There are areal differences in types of Wanderwörter and the networks through which they spread. Specific categories of cultural association, including but not limited to agricultural cultivation, condition widespread borrowing. Wanderwörter are outliers in the realm of loanwords, borrowed far more frequently than typical lexical items but still a subset of a more general phenomenon. We show that the link between Wanderwörter and cultural diffusion may be a more sound basis for defining this term than the traditional definitions that invoke the loan frequency, areality, or untraceability of these terms.
Keyword: Americas; Australia; Borrowing; Language contact; Social networks; Wanderwörter
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1885/14614
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