14,858 research outputs found
Empirical approaches to the phonological structure of words/ edited by Christiane Ulbrich, Alexander Werth, Richard Wiese.
In English.Includes bibliographical references and index.One of the basic grammatical categories in linguistics is the phonological word. But how are words made up in terms of their sounds? And how is the information on the sound structure of words used in the processing of words? The multidimensionality of the phonological word relates it to semantics, morphology, phonology and syntax. It is nevertheless a category that has only been an object of serious study since the prosodic turn in phonology and thus cannot be considered an established category of grammatical description. This volume brings together scholars interested in the complex relations of the phonological word, applying different empirical approaches.Ulbrich, Christiane / Werth, Alexander / Wiese, Richard -- Bergmann, Pia -- Bronner, Dagmar / Busch, Nathanael / Fleischer, Jürg / Poppe, Erich -- Reina, Javier Caro -- Domahs, Ulrike / Domahs, Frank / Kauschke, Christina -- Kentner, Gerrit -- Ulbrich, Christiane / Wiese, Richard -- Werth, Alexander / Rocholl, Marie Josephine / Henrich, Karen / Lanwermeyer, Manuela / Schnell, Hanni Th. / Domahs, Ulrike / Herrgen, Joachim / Schmidt, Jürgen Erich -- Boll-Avetisyan, Natalie -- Scharinger, Mathias. The word in phonology: questions and answers / The phonological word in German -- Insights from an acoustic-phonetic study of complex words / (Non- )separation of words in early medieval Irish and German manuscripts and the concept "word" / Word-profiling strategies in Central Catalan, Itunyoso Trique, and Turkish / The morphology-prosody interface in typically developing and language-impaired populations / Schwa optionality and the prosodic shape of words and phrases / Phonotactic principles and exposure in second language processing / The interaction of vowel quantity and tonal cues in cognitive processing: An MMNstudy concerning dialectal and standard varieties / The role of phonological structure in speech segmentation by infants and adults: a review and methodological considerations / Neural bases of phonological representations: Empirical approaches and methods /1 online resource (vi, 277 pages)
Alexander Werth. The Destiny of France
Mantoux Paul. Alexander Werth. The Destiny of France. In: Politique étrangère, n°2 - 1937 - 2ᵉannée. pp. 199-200
La mentalité du peuple soviétique
Werth Alexander. La mentalité du peuple soviétique. In: Politique étrangère, n°5 - 1949 - 14ᵉannée. pp. 451-464
Nicolas Werth, Video Address, Round Table, Moscow 15 April 2014: Alexander Werth, A War Journalist in the Soviet Union (1941-1945)
Alexander Werth, A War Journalist in the Soviet Union (1941-1945
Nicolas Werth, Video Address, Round Table, Moscow 15 April 2014: Alexander Werth, A War Journalist in the Soviet Union (1941-1945)
Alexander Werth, A War Journalist in the Soviet Union (1941-1945
The Great Ukrainian Famine, 1932-1933, A Genocide?
Nicolas Werth is a prominent French historian, and an internationally
known expert on communist studies, particularly the
history of the Soviet Union. He is the son of Alexander Werth, a
Russian-born British journalist and writer. Werth is a research
director at the Institut d���histoire du temps pr��sent (fr), affiliate
to CNRS. He is currently researching and writing a book based
on new archival evidence of the Ukranian Famine.Scowcroft Institut
Douglas Alexander Stewart, poet, author and playwright
Douglas Alexander Stewart, poet, author and playwrigh
Author inscription in William Hazlitt, essayist and critic; selections from his writings, with a memoir, biographical and critical by Alexander Ireland
Author's gift inscription, "To W. C. Hazlitt Esq with kind regards, from Alexr Ireland," with tipped-in review of the book.ASU Library edition has inscription from Ireland to Hazlitt [a child of William Hazlitt?].
Hazlitt , William, 1778-1830.
Ireland, Alexander, 1810-1894
The Author of the Alexander Romance
This paper, which is based on a portion of the introduction of the author’s edition of Il Romanzo di Alessandro (Mondadori: Fondazione Valla 2007), surveys the generic components of the Alexander Romance in an attempt to arrive at a definition of the work. The argument builds on Merkelbach’s categorisation of elements and uses Fusillo’s insight into the novel as an ‘encyclopaedic genre’ to propose that ‘historical novel’ is not, as Hägg contended, a misnomer for the work. The main components I discuss are: ‘life’; praxeis; chreiai; Cynic elements, including choliambic poetry and utopian perspectives; and the Egyptian aspects of the narrative. A concluding jeu d’esprit offers a characterisation of the putative author, his antecedents and his process of composition.Richard Stoneman was for 25 years editor for classics at Croom Helm and then Routledge. In 1997 he was appointed an Honorary Fellow in the department of classics, University of Exeter. After retiring from publishing in 2006 he has been pursuing his researches on the Alexander legends and teaching a course on the subject at Exeter. His Penguin translation of the Alexander Romance was published in 1991, and a volume of translated Legends of Alexander the Great appeared from Everyman in 1994. Also in 1994 he co-edited Greek Fiction with John Morgan. His edition of the Greek recensions of the Alexander Romance was published (volume I) by the Fondazione Valla in 2007 – volumes II and III will follow over the next few years – and his Alexander the Great: A Life in Legend appeared from Yale University Press in spring 2008. He is the author of a number of other books on Greek history and travel, and is writing a book on oracles
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