218,337 research outputs found

    Luzula x somedana Fdez.-Carvajal & Fdez. Prieto, hybr. nov.

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    [ES] Se describe un nuevo híbrido interespecífico en el género Luzula DC: L.x somedana Fdez. Carvajal and Fdez. Prieto, hybr. nov. (= L. nutans (Vili.) Duval-Jouve x L. sylvatica (Hudson) Gaudin subsp. henriquesii (Degen) P. Silva).[EN] A new interspecific hybrid in the genus Luzula DC. is described; L. x somedana Fdez. Carvajal and Fdez. Prieto, hybr. nov. (= L. nutans (Vili.) Duval-Jouve x L. sylvatica (Hudson) Gaudin subsp. henriquesii (Degen) P. Silva)

    Proceedings of the 6th Gesture and Speech in Interaction Conference / Encouraging gesture use in a narration task increases speakers gesture rate, gesture salience and the production of representational gestures

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    Previous work has shown the positive effect of encouraging gestures in performing varioustasks; in these studies, the participants generally appeared to gesture more when explicitlyasked to do it. However, little attention has been paid to whether encouraging gestures alsoaffects other gesture features, i.e., gesture type and salience. In this paper we explore this issue.Twenty native Italian speakers described the content of short comic strips to a listener in 2conditions: Non-Encouraging gestures (N); Encouraging gestures (E). Co-speech gestures weremanually coded and classified according to gesture type (Representational vs. Non-Representational) and gesture salience (Salient vs Non-Salient). The results show thatinstructing speakers to gesture led to an increase in gesture rate, in gesture salience, and in thenumber of representational gestures. By contrast, in the non-encouraging condition the rate ofNon-Salient gestures was significantly higher, but no difference was found for Non-Representational gestures.Alice Cravotta, Pilar Prieto and M. Grazia Bus

    Silvia Prieto y el "otro" nuevo cine argentino

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    This text analyzes some formal aspects in Silvia Prieto, a 1998 film by Martín Rejtman. It pursues the elucidation of significant elements aimed at the future development of the filmmaker's poetics, its possible links with a certain cinematic tradition, along with calling attention to a trend, which the author of the article ranks among the most important ones in today's Argentine cinema

    La tragedia espiritual de Vizcaya

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    Na p. [5] cítase unha encíclica sobre o comunismo de Pío XI de Marzo de 193

    Herbert González Zymla y Diego Prieto López (eds.), Monasterio de Piedra, un legado de 800 años. Historia, Arte, Naturaleza y Jardín

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    Obra ressenyada: Herbert GONZÁLEZ ZYMLA y Diego PRIETO LÓPEZ (eds.), Monasterio de Piedra, un legado de 800 años. Historia, Arte, Naturaleza y Jardín. Zaragoza: Institución Fernando el Católico, 2019

    C. Prieto, La société contractante

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    C. Prieto, La société contractante. In: Revue internationale de droit comparé. Vol. 47 N°1, Janvier-mars 1995. p. 285

    Adolfo Prieto, empresario, vestido de traje, retrato.

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    Prieto Adolfo, ""P"", ""153"", I.O

    C. Prieto, La société contractante

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    C. Prieto, La société contractante. In: Revue internationale de droit comparé. Vol. 47 N°1, Janvier-mars 1995. p. 285

    Prosodic evidential and epistemic markers in Sardinian yes-no questions

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    Little has been said about the role of prosody as a marker of evidentiality and epistemicity. Whereas evidentiality refers to the marking of the source of information in a proposition, epistemicity refers to the expression of a speaker’s certainty about the truth value of his/her proposition (De Haan 2001). Crosslinguistically, evidentiality and epistemicity can be marked through different linguistic strategies. For example, evidential markers can be instantiated either morphologically (e.g., díiga apé-wi ‘I played football (I saw it)’ in Tuyuca: Papafragou et al. 2007) or lexically (Cruschina & Remberger 2008). On the other hand, epistemicity has been reported to be marked lexically (e.g., That would be my roommate in English: Gravano et al. 2008) and also prosodically through the use of distinct intonation contours (Vanrell et al. 2010). Typologically, Sardinian constitutes a good test case to investigate the expression of evidentiality and epistemicity in yes-no questions, which can be expressed in a number of ways. For example, they can present a special intonation as in (1) or word order changes as in (2), or they can be headed by the particle a or nachi (na(rat) chi, ‘s/he says that’), see (3) and (4): (1) Mandarinu, a che nd’at?¡H+L* L% ‘Do you have tangerines?’ vs. Nachi benis a mandigare?H+L* L% ‘Are you coming to eat (I suppose so)?’ vs. Sa una est? ¡H*+L L% ‘Is it one o’clock? ’ (Vanrell et al. 2011). (2) Mandicatu as? ‘Have you eaten?’ (Remberger 2010). (3) A benis a jocare chin mecus? ‘Are you coming to play with me?’ (Jones 1993). (4) Nachi benis a mandigare? ‘Are you coming to eat (I suppose so)?’ (Vanrell et al. 2011). The goal of this research is to test experimentally how prosody interacts with lexicosyntactic structure in conveying evidentiality and epistemicity. The preliminary corpus analyzed was obtained by means of the Discourse Completion Test methodology (Nurani 2009), using a prompted response questionnaire. Following Sudo’s (to appear) proposal, we created a set of situations which contained different combinations of evidential and epistemic conditions (e.g., ‘It’s time for lunch and your daughter arrives home. You know that she does not eat a lot, but today she seems to be hungry. Ask her whether she is hungry’). For instance, this specific situation was evidentially biased for a positive answer to the question and epistemically biased for a negative answer. 11 female speakers of Logudorese Sardinian participated in this experiment. We elicited a total of 26 situations x 11 speakers, yielding a total of 286 utterances. For the work presented here, the data from 3 speakers were annotated in terms of prosody and use of lexical and syntactic markers. The preliminary results clearly confirm that unbiased yes-no questions are systematically headed by the particle a and also characterized by the upstepped falling nuclear accent ¡H+L* L% (84% of the time) (Fig. 1). By contrast, biased yes-no questions (be it epistemically or evidentially) present fronted constituents (87%) and the rising-falling H*+L L% intonational pattern (83%) (Fig. 2). However, when the bias leads to a negative answer, it can also be marked by means of negation (47%), which is incompatible with fronting, and rising-falling contours (62%) (Fig. 3). In addition, differences concerning the nature of the bias, evidential or epistemic, are found. All in all, the results suggest that there is an important correlation between the syntactic/lexical form chosen and the intonational contour choice. It is thus clear that prosodic markers of epistemicity and evidentiality in questions have to be studied hand in hand with their lexicosyntactic properties. The innovation of this work lies in including two different types of bias in yes-no questions, evidential and epistemic, and in considering that these biases can also be grammatically encoded in prosody. Figure 1: Waveform and f0 contour of the utterance De tumatas, a nd’as? (‘Do you have tomatoes?’). Figure 2: Waveform and f0 contour of the utterance Ma cuddu líberu est, custu pacu?(‘But is that the book?’). Figure 3: Waveform and f0 contour of the utterance E tando no nd’endides pius, de ‘irdura? (‘So you are not going to sell vegetables anymore?’). References Cruschina, S., Remberger, E.-M. 2008. Hearsay and reported speech. Evidentiality in Romance. In Benincà, P., Damonte, F., Penello, N. (eds.), Selected Proceedings of the 34th Incontro di Grammatica Generativa. Padova: Unipress (Special issue Rivista di Grammatica Generativa, vol. 33), 95-116. De Haan, F. 2001. The relation between modality and evidentiality. In Müller, R., Reis, M. (eds.), Modalität und Modalverben im Deutschen. Linguistische Berichte, Sonderheft 9. Hamburg: H. Buske, 201-216. Gravano, A., Benus, S., Hirschberg, J., Sneed German, E., Ward, G. 2008. The effect of contour type and epistemic modality on the assessment of speaker certainty. In Barbosa, P. A., Madureira, S., Reis, C. (eds.), Proceedings of Speech Prosody 2008. Campinas: ISCA Archive, 401-404. Jones, M. A. 1993. Sintassi della lingua sarda. Cagliari: Condaghes. Nurani, L. M. 2009. Methodological issue in pragmatic research: is discourse completion test a reliable data collection instrument?. Jurnal Sosioteknologi Edisi 17 Tahun 8, 667-678. Papafragou, A., Li, P., Choi, Y., Han, Ch. 2007. Evidentiality in language and cognition. Cognition 103, 253-299. Remberger, E.-M. 2010. Left-peripheral interactions in Sardinian. Lingua 120, 555-581. Sudo, Y. To appear. Biased polar questions in English and Japanese. In: Gutzman, D., Gärtner, H. M. (eds.), Expressives and Other Kinds of Non-truth-conditional meaning. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Vanrell, M. M., Mascaró, I., Torres-Tamarit, F., Prieto, P. 2010. When intonation plays the main character: information- vs. confirmation-seeking questions in Majorcan Catalan. Proceedings Speech Prosody 2010 100168: 1-4, ISBN: 978-0-557-51931-6. (5 November 2011). Vanrell, M.M., Schirru, C., Ballone, F., Prieto, P. 2011. Sard_ToBI. Paper presented at Workshop on Romance ToBI. (5 November 2011)
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