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1
Glottolog 4.4 Resources for Doe
: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 2021
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2
From "engl-isc" to "whatever-ish": a corpus-based investigation of "-ish" derivation in the history of English
In: English language and linguistics. - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press 24 (2020) 4, 801-831
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3
A construction of independent means: the history of the 'way' construction revisited
In: English language and linguistics. - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press 23 (2019) 3, 671-699
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4
An Optimized Abstractive Text Summarization Model Using Peephole Convolutional LSTM
In: Symmetry ; Volume 11 ; Issue 10 (2019)
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5
From "sicker" to "sure": the contact-induced lexical layering within the Medieval English adjectives of certainty
In: English language and linguistics. - Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press 22 (2018) 2, 283-300
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6
Doe: a language of Tanzania
: SIL International, 2018
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7
"The trolley rumbled through the tunnel" : on the history of the English intransitive motion construction
In: Folia linguistica historica. - Berlin : Mouton de Gruyter 38 (2017), 29-73
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8
LINGUIST List Resources for Doe
Damir Cavar, Director of Linguist List; Malgorzata E. Cavar, Director of Linguist List. - : The LINGUIST List (www.linguistlist.org), 2017
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9
Old English suffix "-cund" and its fate
In: Kwartalnik neofilologiczny. - Warszawa : Wydawn. Naukowe PWN 62 (2015) 3, 487-504
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10
Matipwili plant names ; Plant_names4 ; Documenting the Dowe language
Laurian Peter; Peter S. Mkwan'hembo. - : Karsten Legere, 2013
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11
Gongo plant names ; Plant_names3 ; Documenting the Dowe language
Peter S. Mkwan'hembo; Laurian Peter. - : Karsten Legere, 2013
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12
Coordinates of villages ; Village_names ; Documenting the Dowe language
: Karsten Legere, 2013
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13
Map ; Documenting the Dowe language
Monika Feinen. - : Karsten Legere, 2013
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14
Mkoko plant names ; Plant_names2 ; Documenting the Dowe language
Laurian Peter. - : Karsten Legere, 2013
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15
Motion events in English: the emergence and diachrony of manner salience from Old English to Late Modern English
In: Folia linguistica historica. - Berlin : Mouton de Gruyter 33 (2012), 29-85
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OLC Linguistik
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16
General productivity: how become waxed and wax became a copula
In: Cognitive linguistics. - Berlin ; Boston, Mass. : de Gruyter Mouton 23 (2012) 1, 27-65
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OLC Linguistik
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17
Khonde Mzigo ; Khonde_mzigo ; Documenting the Dowe language
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18
House buildling and rain making ; House_building_rain_making ; Documenting the Dowe language
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19
Dowe wedding songs ; Wedding_songs ; Documenting the Dowe language
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20
Dowe rituals and football ; Rituals_and_football1 ; Documenting the Dowe language
Abstract: Various offerings and rituals, e.g. rain making, unemployment, female infertility; a selection of expressions used during an improvised football training ; Summary of deposit The Dowe language is a Bantu language spoken in the hinterland of the Indian Ocean coast in some villages of Msata and Miono Ward (Bagamoyo District, Coast Region) of the United Republic of Tanzania. “Ethnologue” claims that there were 24,000 Dowe speakers in 1987. The Language Atlas (MLT 2009:3) lists 7,944 Dowe speakers. The language can be rated highly endangered for the low number of Dowe-speakers, the lack of intergenerational language transfer and the heavy influence of Swahili. This collection will include material from fieldwork conducted between 2012-2013 and is expected to deposit in the near future. Group represented Dowe. Language information The Dowe language (autonym Chidowe, xenonym Kidoe, Doe) is a small Bantu language of Guthrie’s G zone. It is spoken in the hinterland of the Indian Ocean coast in some villages of Msata and Miono Ward (Bagamoyo District, Coast Region) of the United Republic of Tanzania. “Ethnologue” claims that there were 24,000 Dowe speakers in 1987. The Language Atlas (MLT 2009:3) lists 7,944 Dowe speakers. The language can be rated highly endangered due to the low number of Dowe-speakers, the lack of intergenerational language transfer and the heavy influence of Swahili. Acknowledgement This deposit is the result of generous ELDP funding and committed fieldwork as well as text editing in close cooperation with Dowe language experts. ; Plant collector, recorder ; Plant collector, transcriber, Swahili translator
Keyword: Doe language; English language; Ritual/religious texts; Swahili; Swahili (macrolanguage)
URL: https://lat1.lis.soas.ac.uk/ds/asv?openpath=MPI927293%23
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