3,380 research outputs found

    Letter, 1858 May 8, D.B. Sanchez (?) to Henry Honaker

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    Letter regarding the sale of a bull. Last name of author unclear, possibly Sanchez or San..z

    Dataset in support of the thesis 'The Effect of High-Fat Diet During Mouse Preimplantation and Pregnancy-Lactation on Uterine Fluid Protein Composition, Maternal Metabolism and Offspring Health''

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    Dataset and omic data from Thesis entitled: The Effect of High-Fat Diet During Mouse Preimplantation and Pregnancy-Lactation on Uterine Fluid Protein Composition, Maternal Metabolism and Offspring Health. Author: Irene Peral-Sanchez The added dataset included raw data generated from the period from Oct 2019 to December 2023. As explained in the thesis, the data were analyzed using SPSS syntax (hierarchical model) and Prism. The omics data (RNA seq and Proteomics) were additionally studied by String and Gene Ontology, apart from R (collaborators). If any other questions or clarification is needed, contact the author or main supervisor. </span

    Analysis of Customer Portfolio and Relationship Management Models : Bridging Managerial Dimensions

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    This paper broadly discusses the customer portfolio theories and their implications in reference to marketing and purchasing perspectives. It provides an insight into how marketers interpret and describe companies' actions. The central theme of the paper - the tools that can be used to facilitate relationship management. The discussion in the paper provides a framework for relationship management, the central tenet of which is to enable managers to invest their resources in the most efficient and effective way. The contributions to the understanding of relationship management are critically reviewed in the following sections. The alternative models have been developed in reference to the market environment and values concepts in reference to the triadic relationship among the organization, supplier and customer has been discussed in the contemporary managerial perspectives. The paper also draws applied recommendations are made about their relevance to strategic decision making and theoretical development in the area of customer portfolio management.Customer portfolio, customer relationship, supplier relationship, decision making, customer value

    Somewhere Between the Colonial and the Postcolonial: An interview with Gibraltarian author Mark G. Sanchez

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    Gibraltar, the British territory located at the southernmost tip of the Iberian Peninsula, is one of those places which are frequently in the news, but which often confuse outsiders with their ‘more-than-meets-the-eye’ complexity. Is it a colony, or is it self-governing? What is its relationship with its much larger neighbour across the border? Is there a Gibraltarian way of thinking? In this interview the Gibraltarian writer and novelist M. G. Sanchez – who has spent the last twenty years expounding upon the contradictions and idiosyncrasies at the heart of modern-day Gibraltarian identity – discusses borders, Brexit, coloniality, hybridity, as well as his latest novel Gooseman and his 2018 travelogue Bombay Journal

    Object agreement marking and information structure along the Quechua-Spanish contact continuum

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    Direct object clitics in Spanish are morphological markers at the interfaces of syntax, phonology, morphology, and information structure (Zwicky 1985; Ordóñez & Repetti 2006; Belloro 2007; Spencer & Luís 2012). In bilingual acquisition they are subject to variability (McCarthy 2008). In this paper we explore the morphology-syntax-information structure mapping of direct object clitics in clitic structures in a range of speakers that includes Quechua-dominant bilinguals and Spanish monolingual individuals along a continuum of language contact situations. Our findings indicate clear dissociation between syntactic properties and marking of morphological features. They also indicate a Progression from default gender marking in clitics to a scalar system of clitic forms based on animacy and informational value along the continuum of speakers. The findings of this exploratory study support the view that while clitics exhibit common syntactic properties across a continuum of speakers, they vary in morphological marking and informational value.Peer reviewed

    Feature variability in the bilingual-monolingual continuum: Clitics in Bilingual Quechua-Spanish, Bilingual Shipibo-Spanish and in Monolingual Limeño Spanish contact varieties

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    Direct object clitics in Latin American Spanish are subject to great variability infeatures across dialects (Camacho and Sánchez 2002; Harris 1995; Heap 2002; Zagona 2002). Variability also characterizes bilingual acquisition (McCarthy 2008) and especially clitic doubling structures in language contact contexts (Luján 1987; Mayer and Sánchez 2016; Sánchez 2003). We focus on the distribution of clitics and DOM in clitic doubling structures among Shipibo-Spanish bilinguals, Quechua-Spanish bilinguals, and monolingual speakers of Spanish in contact with Quechua. We analyze a continuum of clitic forms and DOM as complex cases of feature reassembly (Lardiere 1998, 2005) and functional convergence (Sánchez 2004) that results in new interface rules (Jackendoff 2011) with scalar hierarchies.Peer reviewe

    University Scholar Series: Carlos Sanchez

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    The Philosophy of Brutality: A Preface in Three Parts Dr. Carlos Alberto Sanchez\u27s current research focuses on the philosophy of violence, particularly on the distinction between violence and brutality. To highlight this difference, violence and brutality are thought within the context of Mexican narco-culture, a socio-political and historico-cultural phenomenon that challenges the very conception of violence, personhood, and culture itself. His talk will deal with issues surrounding this current work. Professor Sanchez is currently the graduate advisor for the MA program in philosophy, Editor of the American Philosophical Association Newsletter on Hispanic/Latino Issues in Philosophy, Chair of Inter-American Relations for the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy, and author of three books, co-editor of two critical anthologies, and has penned a couple of dozen articles on phenomenology or Mexican philosophy.https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/uss/1037/thumbnail.jp

    Christina Sanchez-Stockhammer, English compounds and their Spelling

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    1. General observationsChristina Sanchez-Stockhammer is a senior lecturer in English linguistics at Ludwig-Maximilian University in Munich. She published Consociation and Dissociation: An Empirical Study of Word-Family integration in English and German as author in 2008, Can We Predict Linguistic Change? as editor in 2015, and Variational Text Linguistics: Revisiting Register in English as co-author in 2016.English Compounds and their Spelling was published in 2018. It is part of the “Studie..

    Sanchez, Ivan

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    Interviewee: Ivan Sanchez Interviewer: Dr. Mark Naison Transcriber: unavailable Date: 05/02/2008 Summarized by: Daniel Matthews Ivan Sanchez is the author of Next Stop: Growing Up Wild Style in the Bronx. Ivan was born near 170th Street off Jerome Avenue on 9/21/1972. His father is from Puerto Rico, while his mother was born in New York and has Puerto Rican ancestry. He has an older brother, a younger sister, and seven stepsiblings by his father. He was close to his Titi, whom he considered a second mother. He spent much of his time at her home on Bailey Avenue near Kingsbridge Road. Sanchez’s father was largely absent from his life. He worked as a mechanic and trucker. He sexually and physically abused Sanchez’s mother, and was addicted to alcohol, heroin, and cocaine. In the late 70s, Sanchez’s mother moved her children to Creston Avenue on 196th Street near Kingsbridge, where many nearby buildings were burning. He describes his mother as a hustler on welfare who did all she could to send her children to Catholic schools. His mother’s family were well educated and successful, and they disowned her for having children in her teens with someone they considered a thug. She always emphasized the importance of education and hoped her children would attend college. She earned her GED and is retired at the time of this interview. Sanchez says his mother struggled with depression, suffered regular nervous breakdowns, and attempted suicide about ten times. He often stayed with extended family during these episodes. His older brother beat him frequently, which he hid from his mother. He attended elementary school at our Lady of Refuge, a Catholic school primarily populated by Latinos, at a time when drugs entered the community and began to cause violence. Sanchez recalls getting into fights with public school boys on his way to and from school. He credits a priest there, Father Jenick, for instilling in him the values that kept him from becoming a drug dealer. His apartment building on Creston Avenue was populated by Irish, Italians, and Albanians, and his was the first Puerto Rican family to move in. Sanchez says the families were loyal to their community, a loyalty undermined when Jamaican dealers brought drug money into the neighborhood in the late 80s. Growing up, Sanchez’s mother played soul, R&B, and Motown in the house. He was first exposed to hip-hop when staying with his Titi Velma in the mid-80s. He was a DJ and b-boy as well as a graffiti artist, and his mother encouraged him and his friends to practice their arts. Graffiti artist Staz mentored him. As the drug trade increased, so did the violence. Sanchez says that his friends robbed local drug dealers, but many of them ended up dead or incarcerated. He doesn’t recall any aspirations for college, and most boys dropped out in their early teens. He describes his neighborhood as devoid of fathers or other responsible adult males. In the late 80s, his mother moved to Virginia with his sister, but Sanchez refused to leave until 1993 when one of his cousins was murdered. Some of his other cousins retaliated and were jailed for a triple homicide. Sanchez was living with his girlfriend and one year-old daughter and was determined to escape the crime and his cocaine addiction. In Virginia, he was able to get work due to computer skills he picked up working in the World Trade Center. He went on to get his Associates Degree in computer networking and security before getting his Bachelor’s Degree from the University of Phoenix. Sanchez says he wrote Next Stop to honor his fallen friends and to teach his daughters about the community he grew up in. On account of the many personal stories, he has received countless death threats. At the time of this interview, he was working on the memoirs of DJ Disco Wiz, the first Latino DJ. He has worked with April Lee Hernandez to speak with children in the Bronx about their “next stop” and making positive changes despite their disadvantages
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