linguistics

  • 101Integrational linguistics — or integrationism is a new development in the theory of communication. The integrationist approach emerged from the work of a group of linguists at the University of Oxford during the 1980s and has since been developed… …

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  • 102Journal of Linguistics — Infobox Journal editor = Nigel Fabb Caroline Heycock Robert D. Borsley discipline = Linguistics abbreviation = publisher = Cambridge University Press country = United Kingdom frequency = Three times a year history = 1965 present openaccess =… …

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  • 103Graduate Institute of Applied Linguistics — Infobox University name = Graduate Institute of Applied Linguistics established = 1998 type = Graduate School head label = President head = David A. Ross city = Dallas state = Texas country = USA faculty = 33 website = [http://www.gial.edu/… …

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  • 104Cohesion (linguistics) — Cohesion is the grammatical and lexical relationship within a text or sentence. Cohesion can be defined as the links that hold a text together and give it meaning. It is related to the broader concept of coherence There are two main types of… …

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  • 105Internet linguistics — is a new subdomain of linguistics suggested by Professor David Crystal. It studies new language styles and forms that have arisen under the influence of the Internet and other new communication media, such as SMS text messaging. [… …

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  • 106American linguistics — for the study of American languages, see Indigenous languages of the Americas. The history of linguistics in the United States begins with William Dwight Whitney, the first US taught academic linguist, who founded the American Philological… …

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  • 107Cline (linguistics) — For other uses, see Cline. In linguistics, a cline is a scale of continuous gradation. While cline is most frequently invoked as a general concept, it has also developed specialized uses in various linguistic sub disciplines. Contents 1 Cline of… …

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  • 108Displacement (linguistics) — In linguistics, displacement is the capability of human language to communicate about things that are not immediately present. In 1960, Charles F. Hockett proposed displacement as one of 13 design features that distinguish human language from… …

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  • 109Regularization (linguistics) — In linguistics, regularization is a phenomenon in language acquisition and language development, whereby irregular forms in morphology, syntax, etc., are replaced by regular ones. Examples are gooses instead of geese in child speech and… …

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  • 110Alternation (linguistics) — In linguistics, an alternation is the phenomenon of a phoneme or morpheme exhibiting variation in its phonological realization. Each of the various realizations is called an alternant. The variation may be conditioned by the phonological,… …

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