8,764 research outputs found

    Extropharciceras Bockwinkel, Becker & Ebbighausen 2009

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    Genus Extropharciceras Bockwinkel, Becker & Ebbighausen, 2009 Type species Extropharciceras conex Bockwinkel, Becker & Ebbighausen, 2009 (original designation). Diagnosis Pharciceratinae with discoidal to pachyconic, subevolute to evolute juvenile stage, whorl profile depressed. Adult stage subinvolute to subevolute with weakly depressed to weakly compressed whorl profile; venter rounded or tabulate. WER low or moderate. Juvenile stage sometimes finely ribbed, adult stage with weak to strong, single or paired ventrolateral grooves. Suture line with very wide external lobe, deep or shortened median E 1 lobe, moderately high median saddle, deep, tongue-shaped E 2 lobe, large, midflank lateral lobe, two or three outer and three inner umbilical lobes. Suture line formula (E 2 E 1 E 2) L U 2 U 4: U 5 U 3 U 1 I to (E 2 E 1 E 2) L U 2 U 4 U 6: U 5 U 3 U 1 I. Included species Extropharciceras conex Bockwinkel, Becker & Ebbighausen, 2009, Anti-Atlas; Pharciceras arenicum Petter, 1959, Ougarta, Algeria; Ammonites Becheri von Buch, 1832, Rhenish Mountains; Pharciceras arenicum var. carinata Petter, 1959, Ougarta, Algeria; Extropharciceras librum Bockwinkel, Becker & Ebbighausen, 2009, Anti-Atlas; Extropharciceras gentile Bockwinkel, Becker & Ebbighausen, 2015, Anti-Atlas; Extropharciceras serum Bockwinkel, Becker & Ebbighausen, 2015, Anti-Atlas; Extropharciceras worki Bockwinkel, Becker & Aboussalam, 2017, Anti-Atlas; Extropharciceras metallicum sp. nov., Rhenish Mountains.Published as part of Korn, Dieter & Bockwinkel, Jürgen, 2021, The pharciceratid ammonoids from the Roteisenstein Formation of Dillenburg (Cephalopoda, Ammonoidea), pp. 1-79 in European Journal of Taxonomy 771 on pages 38-39, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2021.771.1503, http://zenodo.org/record/553609

    Uma análise do humor irônico em duas traduções brasileiras de Jakob Der Lügner de Jurek Becker

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    Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Comunicação e Expressão. Programa de Pós-graduação em Estudos da TraduçãoO objetivo desta dissertação é analisar a tradução do humor irônico em duas versões brasileiras do primeiro romance do escritor de origem judaico-alemã, Jurek Becker (1982). A teoria que embasa a nossa análise é a metodologia desenvolvida por Katharina Reiß na Alemanha (1971), mediante a qual a autora visava a uma crítica de tradução mais objetiva, que contemplasse a especificidade do texto traduzido. A presente pesquisa analisa a qualidade dos equivalentes propostos por dois tradutores no translado do humor irônico em torno do elemento de enredo, um fabuloso rádio, com o qual o personagem central da narrativa Jakob der Lügner espalha sinais de esperança em um gueto judeu. Para avaliar a qualidade dos equivalentes propostos, a pesquisa emprega a categoria lingüística e a categoria pragmática da crítica de tradução da abordagem de Reiß e seu conceito central, a equivalência. The aim of the present thesis is to analyse the translation of ironic humour in two Brazilian translations of the first novel of the German Jewish writer Jurek Becker (1982). The theoretical background for our analysis is the methodology developed by Katharina Reiß in Germany (1971), which aims at objective translation criticism that takes into account the specificity of a tranlated text. The present research analyses the quality of the equivalents proposed by two translators with respect to the ironic humour surrounding an element of the narrative, a fabulous radio, through which the main character of Jakob der Lügner (Jacob, the Liar) brings a flash of hope in a Jewish ghetto. To assess the quality of the equivalents proposed, the research employs the linguistic and the pragmatic categories of Reiß translation criticism and its central concept, the equivalence

    Unterlassene Hilfeleistung?

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    Becker U, Sander U. Heranwachsende zwischen Jugendhilfe und Jugendpsychiatrie. Sozial Extra. 2011;35(5-6):33-37

    Kostenmanagement

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    Bis 2. Aufl. u.d.T.: Becker, Wolfgang : Kostenpolitikund Erfolgssteuerun

    Polyzygia insculpta subsp. insculpta Becker 1964

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    Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker, 1964 (Pl. II; Fig. 25) 1964 Polyzygia ? insculpta nov. sp.; Becker: 53–54, pl. 7, figs. 5–6. 1969 Polyzygia ? insculpta insculpta Becker; Becker: 259. 1969 Polyzygia insculpta Becker; Groos: 21, pl. 4, fig. 6. 1970 Polyzygia ? insculpta Becker; Bultynck: pl. 28, fig. 11. 1971 Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker; Adamczak: 144–145, pl. 1, fig. 1, pl. 4, figs. 1–10. 1972 Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker; Michel: 226–227, pl. 10, fig. 1–2. 1982 Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker; Becker & Groos-Uffenorde: 309, pl. 4, fig. 9.? 1989 Polyzygia insculpta ssp. indet. Becker; Becker: 142, pl. 5, fig. 3. 1990 Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker; Casier in Casier & Préat: pl. 1, fig. 32. 1992 Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker; Casier in Casier et al.: 77, pl. 2, fig. 1. 1993 Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker; Kasimi: pl. 17, fig. 14. 1995 Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker; Casier in Casier et al.: 494, pl. 64, fig. 21.? 1995 Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker?; Casier in Casier et al.: 494, pl. 64, fig. 22.? 1997 Polyzygia cf. insculpta insculpta Becker; Casier et al.: 156, 158, pl. 2, fig. 2. 2001 a Polyzygia insculpta Becker; Becker: 62–63. 2004 Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker; Becker in Becker et al.: 48. 2013 Polyzygia insculpta insculpta Becker; Maillet: 111, pl. XIV, fig. 22. Material. 3 specimens (2 V, 1 F). Diagnosis. Becker (1969, p. 259). Description. Medium-sized almost equivalve carapace, sub-oval and slender posteriorly in lateral view. Hmax at 2 / 5 anterior; Lmax slightly ventral; Wmax almost median. Highly arched dorsal margin, strongly oblique both anteriorly and posteriorly from Hmax. Convex ventral margin, becoming more arched at its extremities. Ventral and dorsal margins clearly converging anteriorly and posteriorly. Regularly convex anterior margin, forming an angle of about 140 ° with the dorsal margin. Regularly convex posterior margin, very highly arched, forming an angle of about 145 ° with the dorsal margin. Anterior part of the carapace slightly higher than the posterior one. Surface smooth. Longitudinal U-shaped ventral sulcus, extending from the antero-dorsal part to the postero-dorsal part, where it forms a stick towards the internal part of the valves. Two vertical short sulci below the dorsal margin, one median, the other slightly anterior. Carina along the free margins of the carapace. Discussion. Although rather badly preserved, our specimens exhibit all the features of the species, and particularly the connection between the ventral sulcus and the S 3, forming a reversed “U”. Occurrences. Emsian to Frasnian, Asturias; Givetian, Morocco; Middle Devonian, Ardenne, Eifel and Poland.Published as part of Maillet, Sebastien, Milhau, Bruno, Vreulx, Michel & Posada, Luis-Carlos Sánchez De, 2016, Givetian ostracods of the Candás Formation (Asturias, North-western Spain): taxonomy, stratigraphy, palaeoecology, relationship to global events and palaeogeographical implications, pp. 1-78 in Zootaxa 4068 (1) on pages 37-38, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4068.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/27064

    Alterssicherung und Nachwuchssicherung

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    Kaufmann F-X. Alterssicherung und Nachwuchssicherung. In: Becker U, ed. Alterssicherung in Deutschland. Festschrift für Franz Ruland zum 65. Geburtstag. Baden-Baden: Nomos; 2007: 245-270

    Jenningsina lethiersi Becker 1971

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    Jenningsina aff. lethiersi Becker, 1971 (Pl. III: Fig. 3) ? 1964 Jenningsina cf. sp. F; Magne: pl. 23, figs. 144–145, pl. 24, figs. 172–174.? 1970 Jenningsina nov. sp., aff. catenulata (Van Pelt) type 1; Lethiers: 72, pl. 7, figs. 7–8.? 1970 Jenningsina nov. sp., aff. catenulata (Van Pelt) type 2; Lethiers: 72, pl. 7, figs. 9–11.? 1970 Jenningsina nov. sp., aff. catenulata (Van Pelt) type 3; Lethiers: 72, pl. 7, fig. 12. cf. 1971 a Jenningsina lethiersi nov. sp.; Becker: 49–51, pl. 9, figs. 80–86. aff. 1974 Jenningsina lethiersi Becker; Lethiers: 75, 77, figs. 1, 2. aff. 1977 Jenningsina lethiersi Becker; Casier: 2, 4, 6, 7, 9, 12, 14, 15. aff. 1982 Jenningsina lethiersi Becker; Milhau: 22, pl. 5, fig. 116. non 1983 a Jenningsina lethiersi Becker; Milhau: 351, pl. 1, fig. 2. aff. 1985 Jenningsina lethiersi Becker; Lethiers et al.: 76–77, pl. 13, fig. 1. aff. 2007 Jenningsina lethiersi Becker; Casier & Préat: 296, pl. 3, figs. 7–8. aff. 2008 a Jenningsina lethiersi Becker; Casier & Olempska: 55, pl. 2, fig. 9. aff. 2008 b Jenningsina lethiersi Becker; Casier & Olempska: 646, fig. 4 A. aff. 2009 Jenningsina lethiersi Becker; Casier in Casier & Préat: pl. 5, fig. 14. 2013 Jenningsina lethiersi Becker; Maillet: 120, pl. XV, fig. 21. Material. 6 specimens (4 C, 2 V). Diagnosis. Becker (1971 a, p. 50). Description. Medium-sized elongated carapace, bean-shaped in lateral view. Overlap of the larger LV over the smaller RV pronounced postero-dorsally and very slight antero-dorsally. Hmax at 1 / 3 anterior; Lmax median; Wmax median. Convex dorsal margin. Almost straight ventral margin. Ventral and dorsal margins converging both anteriorly and posteriorly. Free margins of the carapace flattened. Regularly convex anterior margin in its ventral part, more arched in its dorsal part. Well rounded posterior margin, oblique anteriorly from dorsal to ventral part, more arched in its dorsal part. Posterior part of the carapace slightly higher than anterior one. Surface reticulated. Globally longitudinal reticulation, with large irregular to polygonal reticles diverging posteriorly from the median longitudinal line of the valves. Marked posterior vertical shoulder along the posterior margin on each valve. Discussion. Morphological differences between J. paffrathensis Krömmelbein, 1954 and J. lethiersi Becker, 1971 are very tenuous. Exhibiting a large size of reticles and an outline of the carapace less oval than in J. paffrathensis Krömmelbein, 1954, the specimens of the Candás Fm show morphology close to J. lethiersi Becker, 1971. Nevertheless, these specimens may be synonym of Jenningsina paffrathensis Krömmelbein, 1954 (ecomorphism?).Indeed, except a difference in the size of the reticules, the general pattern of reticulation is identical in these two species. On the contrary to J. paffrathensis Krömmelbein, 1954, J. lethiersi Becker, 1971 is not known with certainty in Upper Givetian deposits, but has been reported at the extreme base of the Frasnian both in the Ardenne (e.g. Milhau 1983 a) and in the Boulonnais (e.g. Lethiers 1970, 1974).However, the two species are frequently associated within a same stratigraphical level (e.g. Maillet 2013 and Casier et al. 2013 for the Ardenne; this paper for the Asturias). Occurrences. Upper Givetian to Lower Frasnian (Candás Fm, mbs C and D), Asturias (Peran-Perlora section). PLATE III. Ostracods from the type-area of the carbonate Candás Formation. For samples stratigraphic position, see Figure 3. 1. Jenningsina catenulata (Van Pelt, 1933), II 1, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 922); 2. Jenningsina paffrathensis Krömmelbein, 1954, Q 8, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 926); 3. Jenningsina aff. lethiersi Becker, 1971, U 12, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 925); 4. Quasillites (Quasillites) quasilitiformis (Polenova, 1952), Q 8, LV (C. O.F.L.S. 938); 5–6. Quasillites (Jennillites) ambiguus Becker, 1989, juvenile (5), A 9, LV (C. O.F.L.S. 943); adult (6), I 6, LV (C. O.F.L.S. 1126); 7–8. Loquitzella mesodevonica Zagora, 1968, adult (7), A 9, LV (C. O.F.L.S. 958); juvenile (8), II 1, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 959); 9. Podocopina indet. P 1, III 6, RV? (C. O.F.L.S. 965); 10– 11. Ampuloides cf. avus Zagora, 1967, adult (10), II 1, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 977); adult (11), B 10, ventral view (C. O.F.L.S. 978); 12. Microcheilinella cf. affinis Polenova, 1955, B 10, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 988); 13. Tubulibairdia cf. clava (Kegel, 1932), A 9, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 1011); 14. Tubulibairdia sp. P 1, B 10, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 1017); 15. Bairdiocypris symmetrica (Kummerow, 1953), A 9, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 1022); 16. Bairdiocypris vastus Polenova, 1952, N 2, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 1026); 17. Praepilatina praepilata (Polenova, 1960), juvenile, A 9, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 1042); 18. Saumella sp., M 2, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 1044); 19. Acratia ? sp. indet., M 2, RV (C. O.F.L.S. 1055).Published as part of Maillet, Sebastien, Milhau, Bruno, Vreulx, Michel & Posada, Luis-Carlos Sánchez De, 2016, Givetian ostracods of the Candás Formation (Asturias, North-western Spain): taxonomy, stratigraphy, palaeoecology, relationship to global events and palaeogeographical implications, pp. 1-78 in Zootaxa 4068 (1) on page 43, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4068.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/27064

    mHealth 2.0 -- Chancen, Perspektiven, Möglichkeiten (Serie: Zukunft Mobility im Gesundheitswesen)

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    Albrecht U-V, Becker S. mHealth 2.0 -- Chancen, Perspektiven, Möglichkeiten (Serie: Zukunft Mobility im Gesundheitswesen). Krankenhaus-IT-Journal. 2014;(6):82-83

    Men, Women, and Addiction: The Case of Cigarette Smoking

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    Cigarette demand equations, derived from the Becker-Murphy model of rational addictive behavior, are estimated separately for men and women. These demand equations account for the reinforcement, tolerance, and withdrawal factors characterizing addictive consumption. Results obtained from these demand equations support the hypothesis that cigarette smoking is an addictive behavior. Particularly interesting are the findings that men are responsive to changes in the price of cigarettes, with a long run price elasticity centered on -0.60, while women are virtually unresponsive to price changes. Men, however, are found to behave more myopically than women.
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