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1
Comparing Iconicity Trade-Offs in Cena and Libras during a Sign Language Production Task
In: Languages; Volume 7; Issue 2; Pages: 98 (2022)
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2
Prominence Augmentation via Nasalization in Brazilian Portuguese
In: Catalan Journal of Linguistics, Vol 18 (2019) (2019)
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3
The Acquisition Path of [w]-final Plurals in Brazilian Portuguese
In: Journal of Portuguese Linguistics, Vol 17, Iss 1 (2018) (2018)
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4
The Acquisition Path of [w]-final Plurals in Brazilian Portuguese
In: Journal of Portuguese Linguistics, Vol 17, Iss 1 (2018) (2018)
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5
Consent forms for the contributors to the Antia Whistling Language Documentation ; antia000 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
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6
Photos of the participants and of the first whistling languages meeting day ; antia033 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
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7
Phillipe Biu talks about whistling and the Occitan Whistling Language ; antia004 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
Philippe Biu; Andrew Nevins; Abbie Hantgan. - : Sophie Salffner, 2014
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8
Photos from the first whistling languages meeting day ; antia035 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
Andrew Nevins; Abbie Hantgan; Thanasis Soultatis. - : Sophie Salffner, 2014
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9
Photos of promotional material for the first whistling languages meeting day ; antia034 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
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10
Sabrine Cepeda talks about being a teacher for whistling languages ; antia005 ; The Antia Whistling Language: documenting language use and language activism
Gerard Pucheu; Abbie Hantgan; Sabrine Cepeda. - : Sophie Salffner, 2014
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11
Asymmetries in generalizing alternations to and from initial syllables. Language 88. 231–268
In: http://becker.phonologist.org/projects/english/becker_nevins_levine_english_2012.pdf (2012)
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12
Miael Beer
In: http://becker.phonologist.org/initialsyllfaith/becker_clemens_nevins_french_portuguese.pdf (2011)
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13
1 Past Participles in Mòcheno: allomorphy, alignment and the
In: http://roa.rutgers.edu/files/1094-0810/1094-ALBER-0-0.PDF (2010)
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14
Two Case Studies in Phonological Universals: A View from Artificial Grammars
In: Biolinguistics, Vol 4, Iss 2-3, Pp 218-233 (2010) (2010)
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15
To appear in Markedness in the Morphosemantics of φ-Features (special issue of
In: http://epubs.surrey.ac.uk/4056/2/GGC-MUMSA-13.pdf (2009)
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16
Russian genitive plurals are impostors
In: http://www.ic.sunysb.edu/Clubs/nels/jbailyn/knigFFF.pdf (2008)
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17
The role of feature-number and feature-type in processing Hindi verb agreement violations.
In: http://www.colinphillips.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/nevins2007.pdf (2007)
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18
Last-conjunct agreement in Slovenian
In: http://sabotin.p-ng.si/~fmarusic/pub/marusic%26al_2007_conjP_draft.pdf (2007)
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19
The role of feature-number and feature-type in processing Hindi verb agreement violations.
In: http://people.umass.edu/bwdillon/nevinsetal_2007.pdf (2007)
Abstract: Abstract This article presents studies of Hindi that investigate whether responses to syntactic agreement violations vary as a function of the type and number of incorrect agreement features, using both electrophysiological (ERP) and behavioral measures. Hindi is well suited to investigation of this issue, since verbs in Hindi mark agreement with the person, number, and gender features of the nominative subject noun phrase. In an ERP study evoked responses were recorded for visually presented verbs appearing at the end of a sentence-initial adverbial clause, comparing responses in a grammatically correct condition with four grammatically incorrect conditions that mismatched the correct agreement on different dimensions (Gender, Number, Gender/Number, Person/Gender). A P600 response was elicited in all grammatically incorrect conditions. No amplitude differences were found among the Gender, Number, and combined Gender/Number violations. This suggests that the feature distance between observed and expected word forms at the morphosyntactic level does not impact ERP responses, contrasting with findings on semantic and auditory processing, and suggests that the P600 response to agreement violations is not additive based on the number of mismatching features and does not reflect top-down, predictive mechanisms. A significantly larger P600 response was elicited by the combined Person/Gender violation, and two different violations involving the Person feature were judged as more severe and recognized more quickly in the behavioral studies. This effect is attributed to the greater salience of the Person feature at multiple levels of representation. Theme: Neural basis of behavior Topic: Cognition
URL: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1074.643
http://people.umass.edu/bwdillon/nevinsetal_2007.pdf
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20
THE SURFEIT OF THE STIMULUS:ANALYTIC BIASES FILTER LEXICAL STATISTICS IN TURKISH LARYNGEALALTERNATIONS
In: http://becker.phonologist.org/projects/surfeit/becker_ketrez_nevins_surfeit.pdf
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