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Hits 1 – 13 of 13

1
Dialect speech and wages
Yao, Y; van Ours, JC. - : ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA, 2019
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2
Daily dialect-speaking and wages among native Dutch speakers
Yao, Y; van Ours, JC. - : Springer Verlag, 2019
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3
On the cognitive basis of contact-induced sound change: Vowel merger reversal in Shanghainese
Yao, Y.; Chang, C. B.. - : Linguistic Society of America, 2015
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4
Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session and Parasession on Theoretical Approaches to Argument Structure
Antić, Z.; Chang, C. B.; Cibelli, E.. - : Berkeley Linguistics Society, 2012
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5
Production of phonetic and phonological contrast by heritage speakers of Mandarin
Rhodes, R.; Haynes, E. F.; Yao, Y.. - : Acoustical Society of America, 2011
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6
The phonetic space of phonological categories in heritage speakers of Mandarin
Chang, C. B.; Rhodes, R.; Haynes, E. F.. - : Chicago Linguistic Society, 2010
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7
Relative reducts in consistent and inconsistent decision tables of the Pawlak rough set model
In: Information sciences. - New York, NY : Elsevier Science Inc. 179 (2009) 24, 4140-4150
OLC Linguistik
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8
A tale of five fricatives: Consonantal contrast in heritage speakers of Mandarin
Chang, C. B.; Haynes, E. F.; Yao, Y.; Rhodes, R.. - : Penn Linguistics Club, 2009
Abstract: This study investigated the production of five Mandarin and English sibilant fricatives by heritage speakers of Mandarin in comparison to native speakers and late learners. Almost all speakers were found to distinguish the Mandarin retroflex and alveolo-palatal, as well as the Mandarin alveolo-palatal and English palato-alveolar. However, fewer distinguished the Mandarin retroflex and English palato-alveolar or the Mandarin and English alveolars, with the majority of heritage speakers falling into this group of "distinguishers" in both cases. These results indicate that heritage speakers, in addition to most late learners, do not have much trouble with the Mandarin post-alveolar contrast, and furthermore, that while native speakers and late learners of Mandarin tend to merge similar Mandarin and English sounds, heritage speakers tend to keep them apart. Thus, of the three groups heritage speakers appear to be the best at maintaining contrast between categories both within and across languages.
Keyword: P Philology. Linguistics; PE English; PI Oriental languages and literatures
URL: http://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1072&context=pwpl
https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/19107/1/Changetal_PWPIL15.pdf
https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/19107/
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9
A web-accessible dictionary of Southeastern Pomo
Yao, Y.; Chang, C. B.; Katseff, S.. - : Linguistic Society of Korea, 2009
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10
A Web-Accessible Dictionary of Southeastern Pomo
Chang, C.B.; Yao, Y.; Katseff, S.. - : University of Canterbury. New Zealand Institute of Language, Brain & Behaviour, 2008
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11
Tone production in whispered Mandarin
Chang, C.; Yao, Y.. - : Pirrot, 2007
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12
Analyzing language development from a network approach ...
Ke, J-Y; Yao, Y.. - : arXiv, 2006
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13
On the Completeness of Incidence Calculus
In: Journal of automated reasoning. - Dordrecht [u.a.] : Springer 16 (1996) 3, 355-368
OLC Linguistik
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