Showing 1 - 15 results of 15 for search '"Italic languages"', query time: 0.78s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Fronting as focalization in Sicilian by Cruschina, S

    Published 2010
    Subjects: “…Italic languages…”
    Book section
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    Strategy instruction in listening for lower-intermediate learners of French by Graham, S, Macaro, E

    Published 2008
    Subjects: “…Italic languages…”
    Journal article
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    The vocative's calling? The syntax of address in Latin

    Published 2002
    Subjects:
    Journal article
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    Antroponymica Italica: Latin and Sabellic names with /Op-/ and /Ops-/ by José Luis García Ramón

    Published 2014-03-01
    “…KEYWORDS: Latin, Sabellic, anthroponyms, Italic languages, etymology…”
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    Article
  12. 12

    Traditional theory about the origin of the Latin imperfect by Matej Hribersek

    Published 2003-12-01
    “…In Proto-Germanic,  the IE imperfect, the aorist and the perfect  continue partly in the old perfect  and partly in its counterpart, the preterite,  while, in Proto-Slavonic,  the old imperfect for non­ momentary  actions was replaced  by forms ending in *-ahb.lIn Italic languages, the functions  of the IE imperfect  passed  on into the compounds with  *bh7Jam. …”
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    Article
  13. 13

    Replication, evocation and revocation of linguistic sexism in translated national anthems by Samson Olasunkanmi Oluga, Teh, Chee Seng, Gerard Sagaya Raj Rajoo

    Published 2016
    “…This paper presents the outcome of a linguistic investigation of selected fifty-eight translated anthems originally written in some West/North Germanic and Romance/Italic languages. Firstly, this reveals twenty (20) cases of replication of linguistic sexism that originate from the Source Texts (STs) and which are duplicated in the Translated Texts (TTs) of the anthems. …”
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    Article
  14. 14

    Contact linguistique et glottogenèse by Cyril Aslanov, Sibylle Kriegel, Georges Daniel Véronique

    Published 2023-01-01
    “…This would explain the high proportion of words of non-Indo-European origin in most of the ancient Indo-European languages: Hittite; Sanskrit; Avestan; ancient Greek; Italic languages; Celtic languages; Germanic languages; Slavic languages; Baltic languages; Tocharian.This study carried out jointly by two Creolists and a specialist in historical and comparative grammar makes it possible to recall what is at stake in the notion of glottogenesis: not only an awareness of the fact that languages have a beginning, which may be more or less calculated, but also that these beginnings, far from being creations ex nihilo, result from new syntheses obtained from pre-existing languages. …”
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    Article
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    Large Language Models are Not Models of Natural Language: They are Corpus Models by Csaba Veres

    Published 2022-01-01
    “…<italic>Transfer learning</italic> has enabled large <italic>deep learning</italic> neural networks trained on the <italic>language modeling</italic> task to vastly improve performance in almost all downstream language tasks. …”
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    Article