Showing 1 - 6 results of 6 for search '"Royal Spanish Academy"', query time: 0.09s Refine Results
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    Codification of new tendencies of using non-sexist language in Spanish by Marina Krugova

    Published 2018-06-01
    “…At the end of 2009 the Royal Spanish Academy published the “New Grammar of the Spanish Language”, the first academic grammar since 1931. …”
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  3. 3

    Juan Gálvez y Leandro Fernández de Moratín : cuatro escenas, obra de Gálvez, inspiradas en las comedias de Moratín by Juan Martínez Cuesta

    Published 1999-01-01
    “…</p><p>This article describes the four canvas painted by Juan Gálvez (1774-1847) in order to alústrate the comedies written by Leandro Fernández of Moratín, published by the Royal Spanish Academy of History, in 1830. Juan Gálvez was one of the official painter in Ferdinand Vlll's court, also he was director of the Royal Spanish Academy of Arts. …”
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  4. 4

    Del mundinovi al Cinefluo: explorando la cultura visual inmersiva en España (1734-1908) by Carmen López San Segundo, Francisco Javier Frutos Esteban, Marina Hernández Prieto

    Published 2024-02-01
    “…The timeframe examined spans from 1734 to 1908, encompassing the period between the introduction of the term “mundinovi” in the Dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy and the premiere of Cinefluo. The purpose of this text is to present a historical approach that aims to enrich our understanding of the archaeology of visual communication media in Spain.…”
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    Can human beings achieve happiness? by Sonia María Rodríguez Huerta

    Published 2020-06-01
    “…It is proposed to modify the meaning of the term “happiness” in the Dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy of Language, to identify it with “a variety of states of pleasant spiritual and physical satisfaction”…”
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    Towards a Corpus-Based Analysis of Anglicisms in Spanish: A Case Study by José L. Oncins-Martínez

    Published 2009-12-01
    “…The presence of this adverb with this new sense in contemporary Spanish is explored and supported with the data found in CORDE and CREA, the two corpora of the Royal Spanish Academy. Since the paper also seeks to show in what ways the Spanish lexicon is being influenced by English, evidence from two major English corpora, the BNC and the COCA, will be used.…”
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