200,974 research outputs found
Percorsi di soggettificazione di MANU AD MANU(M) in alcuni dialetti del nord Italia
Questo lavoro illustra gli esiti della costruzione latina manu ad manu(m) in alcune varietà dialettali italiane settentrionali di Piemonte, Lombardia e Liguria. Scopo principale dell’indagine è stato individuare i percorsi di grammaticalizzazione che hanno portato una costruzione dal significato originariamente concreto ad acquisire funzioni sempre più astratte, realizzando un processo di espansione funzionale dal dominio del lessico a quello della grammatica e, in alcuni casi, della pragmatica
Alias : miti còlti sul (manu)fatto
Engramma issue No. 183, “Alias. Miti còlti sul (manu)fatto” (a word pun with Italian police language “colti sul fatto”, caught in the act), edited by Monica Centanni and Maurizio Harari, is conceived as a homage to the memory of Giuseppe Pucci. Giuseppe (Pino) Pucci was a professor in Archaeology and Classics, but also a brilliant reader of the classical tradition in contemporary culture. The title includes the word “Alias” (in latin meaning “altrimenti”/otherwise – otherwise in time, otherwise in places, otherwise in academy, otherwise from a short-view specialistic discipline, otherwise from ideological prejudices; otherwise in all senses) – the style-cypher of Pucci’s intellectual work. Otherwise, “Alias” is the special weekly issue of the Italian newspaper “il manifesto” where he published his last contributions concerning classics and the classical tradition. All the essays in this issue of Engramma relate to the theme of the relationship between texts and images, from Antiquity to Contemporary culture. The contributions by Oliver Taplin, Monica Centanni, Alessandro Grilli, Ludovico Rebaudo, Concetta Cataldo and Rocco Davide Vacca are related to the topic “Pots&Plays”, the analysis of the interactions between Greek theatrical texts and V and IV Century vase paintings. Maurizio Harari and Claudio Franzoni in their essays have focused on the mechanism of the Classical tradition through specific XX Century iconographies. In this issue, we also publish the response by Salvatore Settis to the “Lettura corale”, a choral reading of his book Incursioni that was issued in Engramma No. 180, and was promoted and curated by Giuseppe Pucci himself. In addition, this issue includes Giuseppe Pucci’s bibliography and the list of the classical dramas performed by the Istituto Nazionale del Dramma Antico (INDA) since 1914
Eutichurus manu Bonaldo 1994
Eutichurus manu Bonaldo, 1994 Map 2 Eutichurus manu Bonaldo, 1994: 131, figs 82̄83, 109. Diagnosis and description. See Bonaldo (1994: 131) Distribution. Peru (Map 2). New record. PERU. Madre de Dios: 15 km E Puerto Maldonado, 12°33’S, 69°03’W, 200 m, 1 female (MUSM-Ent 504415), 21.II.1990, D. Silva leg.Published as part of Bonaldo, Alexandre B., Lise, Arno A., Ramírez, Martín J. & Saturnino, Regiane, 2018, Revisiting the spider genus Eutichurus Simon, 1897 (Araneae, Eutichuridae): new species and complementary descriptions, pp. 321-346 in Zootaxa 4382 (2) on page 342, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4382.2.6, http://zenodo.org/record/118207
Allocution à l'occasion du décès de M. Manu Leumann, correspondant étranger de l'Académie
Filliozat Jean. Allocution à l'occasion du décès de M. Manu Leumann, correspondant étranger de l'Académie. In: Comptes rendus des séances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, 122ᵉ année, N. 1, 1978. p. 75
Signa Crucis, Hebraeae Gentis, partim ex judaeorum descriptione eruta, partim judaea manu picta, Praeside Theodoro Dassovio, LL. OO. P.P. publice defendet Respondens M. Caspar. Frieder. Arnoldi, Revalia-Livonus
SIGNA CRUCIS, HEBRAEAE GENTIS, PARTIM EX JUDAEORUM DESCRIPTIONE ERUTA, PARTIM JUDAEA MANU PICTA, PRAESIDE THEODORO DASSOVIO, LL. OO. P.P. PUBLICE DEFENDET RESPONDENS M. CASPAR. FRIEDER. ARNOLDI, REVALIA-LIVONUS
Signa Crucis, Hebraeae Gentis, partim ex judaeorum descriptione eruta, partim judaea manu picta, Praeside Theodoro Dassovio, LL. OO. P.P. publice defendet Respondens M. Caspar. Frieder. Arnoldi, Revalia-Livonus ( - )
Title page ( - )
Dedication ( - )
Signa Crucis Iudæä manu picta. ( - )
§. I. [bis §. X.] ( - )
§. XI. [bis §. XX.] ( - )
§. XXI. [bis §. XXVII.] ( - )
Corollaria. ( -
On the phylogenetic position of Carollia manu Pacheco et al., 2004 (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae: Carolliinae)
Velazco, Paúl M. (2013): On the phylogenetic position of Carollia manu Pacheco et al., 2004 (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae: Carolliinae). Zootaxa 3718 (3): 267-276, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3718.3.
Carollia manu Pacheco, Solari & Velazco 2004
106. Manu Short-tailed Bat Carollia manu French: Carollia du Manu / German: Manu-Kurzschwanzblattnase / Spanish: Carolia de Manu Taxonomy. Carollia manu Pacheco, Solari & Velazco, 2004, “Morro Leguia, Paucartambo-Pillcopata road, km. 134, 2250 m, Paucartambo Province, Cuzco Department, Peru, at approximately 13°11'52” S, 71°34'36" W.” Carolia manu was called Carolliasp.? (3) by R. H. Pine in 1972. In her morphometric analyses, L. J. McLellan in 1984 included Pine’s single specimen in C. perspicillata. Monotypic. Distribution. SE Peru (Madre de Dios, Cusco, and Puno departments) and W & C Bolivia (La Paz Department). Descriptive notes. Head-body 59-66 mm, tail 7-10 mm, ear 18-22 mm, hindfoot 13-15 mm, forearm 41-2-44-4 mm; weight 17-21 g. The Manu Short-tailed Batis a large species of Carollia, with soft, long, and fluffy dorsal fur. Dorsal hairs are tricolored, with grayish brown basal band, buff-to-whitish brown medial band, and brown band at tips. Ventral hairs are short, brown-tipped, and tricolored on pectoral region and bicolored on abdominal and inguinal region. Dorsal and ventral pelage is not counter shaded and looks brown overall. Forearm is long, and proximal one-halfis well furred. Uropatagium is wide, enclosing shorttail, and has a deep notch. Lower lip has central papilla surrounded by smaller warts in a U-shape. Ears are moderately large, broad, and triangular, with pointed tips. Rostrum is short and wide; anteorbital region is inflated, with low sagittal crest; and zygomatic arches are incomplete. C' is large and divergent. Upper and lower molars are broad and robust. Habitat. Tropical montane forests (Cloud forests), along eastern slope of Andes in south-eastern Peru and northern to central Bolivia, at elevations of 1300-2250 m. These forests have abundant epiphytes, hepatics (Hepatica, Ranunculaceae), and tree ferns. Most Manu Short-tailed Bats were collected on steep terrain, with mature and secondary forests, and usually near small streams. At higher elevations, forest trees were heavily covered with epiphytes, and understory was dominated by bamboo. Manu Short-tailed Bats have been found in sympatry with Silky Short-tailed Bats (C. brevicaudum) and Seba’s Short-tailed Bats (C. perspicillata). Food and Feeding. There is no specific information available for this species, but fruits are expected to be the primary food of the Manu Short-tailed Bat. Breeding. No information. Activity patterns. No information. Movements, Home range and Social organization. No information. Status and Conservation. Classified as Least Concern on The IUCN Red List. The Manu Short-tailed Bat might have a wider distribution than is currently known. It occurs in some protected areas in south-eastern Peru. Bibliography. Castano et al. (2018), McLellan (1984), McLellan & Koopman (2008), Pacheco et al. (2004), Pine (1972), Solari et al. (2006), Velazco (2013).Published as part of Don E. Wilson & Russell A. Mittermeier, 2019, Phyllostomidae, pp. 444-583 in Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona :Lynx Edicions on page 536, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.645859
Manu Karuka, Empire’s Tracks: Indigenous Nations, Chinese Workers, and the Transcontinental Railroad
Manu Karuka, Empire’s Tracks: Indigenous Nations, Chinese Workers, and the Transcontinental Railroad. University of California Press, 2019. Pp. 320. ISBN: 9780520296640 Author: Bryant Scott, Texas A & M University at Qatar Carving across the plains, mountains, and plateaus of the American West, trains forge the bedrock of the mythic United States. From John Ford’s early silent film, The Iron Horse (1924), to the monumental collaboration between Ford, Henry Hathaway, and George Marshall, H..
Delivering the Maori-language newspapers on the Internet
Although any collection of historical newspapers provides a particularly rich and valuable record of events and social and political commentary, the content tends to be difficult to access and extremely time-consuming to browse or search. The advent of digital libraries has meant that for electronically stored text, full-text searching is now a tool readily available for researchers, or indeed anyone wishing to have asscess to specific information in text. Text in this form can be readily distributed via CD-ROM or the Internet, with a significant impact on accessibility over traditional microfiche or hard-copy distribution. For the majority of text being generated de nouveau, availability in electronic form is standard, and hence the increasing use of full-text search facilities. However, for legacy text available only in printed form, the provision of these electronic search tools is dependent on the prior electronic capture of digital facsimile images of the printed text, followed by the conversion of these images to electronic text through the process of optical character recognition (OCR). This article describes a project undertaken at the University of Waikato over the period 1999 to 2001 to produce a full-text searchable version of the Niupepa or Maori- language newspaper collection for delivery over the Internet
FIGURE 1 in On the phylogenetic position of Carollia manu Pacheco et al., 2004 (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae: Carolliinae)
FIGURE 1. Photograph of an adult male Carollia manu captured at Pampa Grande, Ayopaya, Cochabamba, Bolivia, in September 2006 (MHNC-M 149 [Museo de Historia Natural Alcide d'Orbigny, Cochabamba, Bolivia]). Photograph by Lizette Siles.Published as part of <i>Velazco, Paúl M., 2013, On the phylogenetic position of Carollia manu Pacheco et al., 2004 (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae: Carolliinae), pp. 267-276 in Zootaxa 3718 (3)</i> on page 268, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3718.3.3, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10099718">http://zenodo.org/record/10099718</a>
- …
