642 research outputs found
Lesbian Radio, August 15 2012
Host Deb Gallagher talks again with Leela Sinha, author of You’re Not Too Much: Intensive Lies in an Expansive World, about the fundamentals of good communication.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/wmpg_lesbianradio/1002/thumbnail.jp
Lesbian Radio, June 20 2012
Host Deb Gallagher talks with Leela Sinha, author of You’re Not Too Much: Intensive Lies in an Expansive World, about the fundamentals of good communication.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/wmpg_lesbianradio/1001/thumbnail.jp
Herbalist Deb Soule, author of The Roots of Healing: A Woman\u27s Book of Herbs,
Herbalist Deb Soule, author of The Roots of Healing: A Woman\u27s Book of Herbs, founded Avena Botanicals of Rockland ten years ago. Avena Botanicals, perhaps the largest herbal apothecary in the Northeast, grows or gathers around 60 percent of the raw plant materials used in producing herbal extracts, oils, salves and teas. The Shaker Community of Sabbath Day Lake has an herbal tradition that is 200 years old, and the herb department is the Shakers\u27 largest industry. Pol Hermes of Dayton, Gail Edwards of Athens and Betty Chase of Falmouth are other Mainers who use herbs. Details
On Case Marking in Assamese Bengali and Oriya
Case is a grammatical category determined by the syntactic or semantic function of a noun or pronoun. Trask (1997) said that “Any one of the forms which a noun or noun phrase may assume in order to represent its grammatical and semantic relation to the rest of the sentence” (p.35).The present paper aims to explore the case marking in Assamese, Bengali spoken in Assam and Oriya in Orissa. In all three languages case is realized in the form of postpositions, when these postpositions take nouns structurally form phrases. Therefore, they are called postpositional phrases. Postpositional phrases are made up of a noun phrase followed by a postposition.
A Study on Rongmei Syllable Structure
A syllable is a sound or succession of a sounds uttered within a single breath-impulse. Syllable is a unit of pronunciation consisting of a vowel alone or of a vowel with one or more consonants. Phonologically, the syllable is “a unit containing one and only one vowel either alone or surrounded by consonants in certain arrangements”. (O’Connor 1973). It is generally accepted that nucleus is obligatory in all languages, thus, the same is true in case of Rongmei. Rongmei is one of the schedule tribe of Northeast India, mainly concentrated in Assam (Barak Valley), Manipur and Nagaland. Ethnically, Rongmeis are Mongloids and their language belongs to Kuki-Naga section of the Kamarupan group of the Baric sub-division of Tibeto-Burman family of languages (Matisoff, 2001). The analysis indicates that Rongmei treats both onset and coda as optional. Besides, the clustering phenomenon is absent at both onset position coda position. This paper is an effort to look into the possible syllable structure in Rongmei Naga language spoken in Barak Valley of South Assam. Keywords: Syllable, Syllable Tree, Heavy Syllable, Light Syllable, Syllable Structure, DOI: 10.7176/JLLL/56-07 Publication date:May 31st 201
Increasing fuel resilience to survive Cascadia
prepared by Oregon Seismic Safety Policy Advisory Commission, Working Group on CEI Hub Mitigation Strategies ; production writer: Laura Hall ; production assistant: Deb Schueller.Title from PDF cover (viewed on January 15, 2020)."OSSPAC Publication Number 19-01."This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references (pages 31-32).Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Graduate medical education in 2030 (Podcast)
In the June issue of the Journal of Graduate Medical Education, an editorial explores what graduate medical education will look like in 2030. In this episode, JGME deputy editor, Deb Simpson, speaks with physician, educator, and author, James Woolliscroft, about the future of graduate medical education, especially in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. They discuss the roles of the DIO, program director, and faculty as well as the impact of technology on the medical education system
Graduate medical education in 2030 (Podcast)
In the June issue of the Journal of Graduate Medical Education, an editorial explores what graduate medical education will look like in 2030. In this episode, JGME deputy editor, Deb Simpson, speaks with physician, educator, and author, James Woolliscroft, about the future of graduate medical education, especially in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. They discuss the roles of the DIO, program director, and faculty as well as the impact of technology on the medical education system
Forest structure and soil properties of mangrove ecosystems under different management scenarios: Experiences from the intensely humanized landscape of Indian Sunderbans
− 0.05% Paraffin Wax Nanocomposite: The Role of Pinning Center at Intergrain Defect Site
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