43,532 research outputs found

    Author Tom Keneally back stage at the Nimrod Theatre, Sydney, 1980 /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Robert McFarlane collection of photographs.; Inscriptions: "Author Tom Keneally back stage Nimrod Theatre 1980 Robert McFarlane"--In pencil on reverse.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6615438

    Author Tom Keneally and actor Justine Saunders backstage during the rehearsals of Bullie's House, Nimrod Theatre, Sydney, 1980 /

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    Title from acquisitions documentation.; Part of the collection: Robert McFarlane collection of photographs.; Inscriptions: "Author Tom Keneally + Actor Justine Saunders backstage Nimrod Theatre 1980 during rehearsal's 'Bulli'es House' Robert McFarlane"--In pencil on reverse.; Also available online at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn6615450

    Non-metrical tense distinctions in isiNdebele (South Africa)

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    This paper provides an introduction to expressions of recent and remote past (both perfective and imperfective) and future in isiNdebele, a Bantu language of South Africa. I describe generalizations about when each form is used and the significant temporal overlap allowed in the use of the forms. I also compare isiNdebele’s system of remoteness marking with those described for Gĩkũyũ and Luganda, with focus on topics like the specificity of recent vs. remote pasts and the relationships between Utterance Time and the times referred to by various past markers. I argue that isiNdebele tense distinctions, both past and future, can be modeled using the Domains and Regions model developed by Robert Botne and Tiffany Kershner (e.g., Botne & Kershner 2008), but that the relationships between so-called P-Domains and D-Domains appear to be qualitatively different in the past vs. in the future.Peer reviewe

    Discourse-pragmatic functions of focus, tense, and aspect in Ishenyi narratives: Text recordings

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    Ishenyi is a Bantu language spoken in northwest Tanzania near Serengeti National Park. Ishenyi (or Isenye, [ntk], JE45) has around 8,000 speakers and is in a cluster of closely related language varieties with Ikoma and Nata. These recordings accompany the chapter named above that analyses narrative structure in a Domains and Regions framework. The data were collected as part of the Helsinki Mara Project, a research initiative funded by the Kone Foundation. The recordings correspond to transcribed and linguistically analyzed narratives—spoken by Amani Makindi, the Ishenyi language consultant, and recorded by Rasmus Bernander (A) and Antti Laine (B-D) (University of Helsinki) in Musoma, Tanzania—appearing in the book Domains and Regions in Bantu Tense and Aspect, edited by Robert Botne and Axel Fanego Palat.Helsinki Mara Projec

    Robert Sparks Walker diary, 1941

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    Diary authored by Chattanooga author and naturalist, Robert Sparks Walker

    Robert Sparks Walker diary, 1945

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    Diary authored by Chattanooga author and naturalist, Robert Sparks Walker

    Robert Sparks Walker diary, 1945

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    Diary authored by Chattanooga author and naturalist, Robert Sparks Walker

    Robert Sparks Walker diary, 1941

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    Diary authored by Chattanooga author and naturalist, Robert Sparks Walker

    Robert Sparks Walker diary, 1953

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    Diary authored by Chattanooga author and naturalist, Robert Sparks Walker

    Robert Sparks Walker diary, 1951

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    Diary authored by Chattanooga author and naturalist, Robert Sparks Walker
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