-
Stress (linguistics)
In linguistics, stress is the relative emphasis that may be given to certain syllables in a word, or to certain words in a phrase or sentence. Stress is typi...
-
Stress (linguistics)
Stress (linguistics)
☆Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
image source in video
-
Phonology - PDE Suprasegmental Phonology I (Stress)
This E-.Lecture discusses the effect of stress in Present-Day English. After an overview of stress from a phonetic and phonological point of view, aspects su...
-
Linguistic Micro-Lectures: Shift Stress
What is shift stress and what are the conditions for its use in PDE? These questions are in the center of this less-than-two-minute micro-lecture by Prof. Handke.
-
Linguistic Micro-Lectures: Lexical Stress
What is lexical stress and where does it apply in PDE? These questions are in the center of this less-than-two-minute micro-lecture by Prof. Handke.
-
[Introduction to Linguistics] Derivational and Inflectional Morphemes, and Morphological Changes
Visit our website: http://bit.ly/1zBPlvm
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/1vWiRxW
Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1vWwDRc
In this video we look at Derivational and Inflectional Morphemes, and Morphological Changes, specifically internal change, suppletion, reduplication, and stress differences in English.
Hello, welcome to TheTrevTutor. I'm here to help you learn your college courses in
-
Stress In English and Arabic-1
الجامعة الإسلامية -- غزة iugaza/ مساق: علم اللغة المقارن Comparative Linguistics/ د. وليد محمد عامر.
-
Bill Idsardi (University of Maryland): Stress, computation, and the Chomsky hierarchy
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
-
Paul Kiparsky (Stanford): From Germanic stress to Scandinavian pitch accent
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
-
Session 1 | 21F.223 Listening, Speaking, and Pronunciation
Lecture 18: Word Stress (cont.); Stress in Compounds. View the complete course at: http://ocw.mit.edu/21F-223F04 License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More info...
-
Phonology - PDE Connected Speech
This E-Lecture discusses and exemplifies the consequences of the rhythmic organization of spoken English as a stress-timed language: Assimilation, Elision, Weakening and Liaison. As usual Handke illustrates his arguments by numerous examples from PDE.
-
Syllable Stress and the Most Important Thing in Life
For Bad Words and Taboo Terms, an introductory class on the linguistics of swearing
-
Julian Treasure: How to speak so that people want to listen
Have you ever felt like you're talking, but nobody is listening? Here's Julian Treasure to help you fix that. As the sound expert demonstrates some useful vocal exercises and shares tips on how to speak with empathy, he offers his vision for a sonorous world of listening and understanding.
TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the worl
-
Hangout Don't Stress Over Sentence Stress!
captioned,subtitled,videos,voa,learning,special,english,report,development,agriculture,food,farming,gardening,health,medicine,higher,education,international,students,elementary,secondary,tertiary,university,college,economics,finance,american,business,communication,culture,download,history,foreign,controlled,language,learn,mp3,music,news,plain,radio,simplified,simple,speech,linguistics,teach,teache
-
Hangout: Part 2: "Don't Stress Over Sentence Stress!"
On TALK2US: English teacher Lida Baker returns with another lesson in sentence stress, explaining which words are normally emphasized or not emphasized in speech. She works with Loren, a chemist...
-
How Stress Affects Mental Bandwidth
captioned,subtitled,videos,voa,learning,special,english,report,development,agriculture,food,farming,gardening,health,medicine,higher,education,international,students,elementary,secondary,tertiary,university,college,economics,finance,american,business,communication,culture,download,history,foreign,controlled,language,learn,mp3,music,news,plain,radio,simplified,simple,speech,linguistics,teach,teache
-
Four Elements University Crack - Freeze's Diary
Oh, nothing like a good crack to get stress relief (throws linguistics book across the floor). Funny how just some little pieces come back to work.
-
Morris Halle (MIT): On the morpho-phonology of the Latin verb
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
-
2014 Linguistics & TESOL Symposium at SJSU
Sequence of talks with timestamps listed below. Sorry about the audio quality. Camerawork: Michal Rudzki. Editing: Lorenzo Tlacaelel L.
00:15:00 - An examination of the English posture verbs sit, stand, and lie. Leslie Bank
00:36:00 - Initial Consonant Mutation in Irish. Janine Robinson
00:50:40 - Small talk on Airplanes. Joshua Lawrence
01:10:00 - Syllabification and Stress pattern in Hin
-
How Much Can We Adjust Our Second Language Grammars? Parameter Resetting
How do we change our grammars when we pick up a new language? Is there a limit to how much we can shift? In this week's episode, we talk about parameter resetting in second language acquisition: how quickly we can change our transferred grammar, whether there's a difference in ability between children and adults, and whether there are some areas where we might be unable to adjust.
This is Topic #
-
Nigel Fabb (Strathclyde University): The metrical line, and prosodic phrasing in performance
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
-
Stress in Space - Judging an Astronaut's Mental State
Being an astronaut is stressful. But astronauts aren’t the best at admitting when they’re feeling the strain. An innovative research project uses speech analysis to spot hints of underlying anxieties.
Day 19 of our advent calendar, A Place Called Space http://rigb.org/advent
Being an astronaut is a stressful job. You face the constant threat of annihilation, and know that a huge team and expensi
-
Bruce Hayes (UCLA): Milton, Maxent, and the Russian method
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
Stress (linguistics)
In linguistics, stress is the relative emphasis that may be given to certain syllables in a word, or to certain words in a phrase or sentence. Stress is typi......
In linguistics, stress is the relative emphasis that may be given to certain syllables in a word, or to certain words in a phrase or sentence. Stress is typi...
wn.com/Stress (Linguistics)
In linguistics, stress is the relative emphasis that may be given to certain syllables in a word, or to certain words in a phrase or sentence. Stress is typi...
- published: 26 Aug 2014
- views: 1
-
author: Audiopedia
Stress (linguistics)
Stress (linguistics)
☆Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
image source in video...
Stress (linguistics)
☆Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
image source in video
wn.com/Stress (Linguistics)
Stress (linguistics)
☆Video is targeted to blind users
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
image source in video
- published: 02 Jan 2016
- views: 0
Phonology - PDE Suprasegmental Phonology I (Stress)
This E-.Lecture discusses the effect of stress in Present-Day English. After an overview of stress from a phonetic and phonological point of view, aspects su......
This E-.Lecture discusses the effect of stress in Present-Day English. After an overview of stress from a phonetic and phonological point of view, aspects su...
wn.com/Phonology Pde Suprasegmental Phonology I (Stress)
This E-.Lecture discusses the effect of stress in Present-Day English. After an overview of stress from a phonetic and phonological point of view, aspects su...
Linguistic Micro-Lectures: Shift Stress
What is shift stress and what are the conditions for its use in PDE? These questions are in the center of this less-than-two-minute micro-lecture by Prof. Handk...
What is shift stress and what are the conditions for its use in PDE? These questions are in the center of this less-than-two-minute micro-lecture by Prof. Handke.
wn.com/Linguistic Micro Lectures Shift Stress
What is shift stress and what are the conditions for its use in PDE? These questions are in the center of this less-than-two-minute micro-lecture by Prof. Handke.
- published: 09 Mar 2015
- views: 41
Linguistic Micro-Lectures: Lexical Stress
What is lexical stress and where does it apply in PDE? These questions are in the center of this less-than-two-minute micro-lecture by Prof. Handke....
What is lexical stress and where does it apply in PDE? These questions are in the center of this less-than-two-minute micro-lecture by Prof. Handke.
wn.com/Linguistic Micro Lectures Lexical Stress
What is lexical stress and where does it apply in PDE? These questions are in the center of this less-than-two-minute micro-lecture by Prof. Handke.
- published: 15 Mar 2015
- views: 73
[Introduction to Linguistics] Derivational and Inflectional Morphemes, and Morphological Changes
Visit our website: http://bit.ly/1zBPlvm
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/1vWiRxW
Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1vWwDRc
In this video we look at Deri...
Visit our website: http://bit.ly/1zBPlvm
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/1vWiRxW
Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1vWwDRc
In this video we look at Derivational and Inflectional Morphemes, and Morphological Changes, specifically internal change, suppletion, reduplication, and stress differences in English.
Hello, welcome to TheTrevTutor. I'm here to help you learn your college courses in an easy, efficient manner. If you like what you see, feel free to subscribe and follow me for updates. If you have any questions, leave them below. I try to answer as many questions as possible. If something isn't quite clear or needs more explanation, I can easily make additional videos to satisfy your need for knowledge and understanding.
wn.com/Introduction To Linguistics Derivational And Inflectional Morphemes, And Morphological Changes
Visit our website: http://bit.ly/1zBPlvm
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/1vWiRxW
Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1vWwDRc
In this video we look at Derivational and Inflectional Morphemes, and Morphological Changes, specifically internal change, suppletion, reduplication, and stress differences in English.
Hello, welcome to TheTrevTutor. I'm here to help you learn your college courses in an easy, efficient manner. If you like what you see, feel free to subscribe and follow me for updates. If you have any questions, leave them below. I try to answer as many questions as possible. If something isn't quite clear or needs more explanation, I can easily make additional videos to satisfy your need for knowledge and understanding.
- published: 15 Mar 2015
- views: 9
Stress In English and Arabic-1
الجامعة الإسلامية -- غزة iugaza/ مساق: علم اللغة المقارن Comparative Linguistics/ د. وليد محمد عامر....
الجامعة الإسلامية -- غزة iugaza/ مساق: علم اللغة المقارن Comparative Linguistics/ د. وليد محمد عامر.
wn.com/Stress In English And Arabic 1
الجامعة الإسلامية -- غزة iugaza/ مساق: علم اللغة المقارن Comparative Linguistics/ د. وليد محمد عامر.
- published: 07 Oct 2012
- views: 413
-
author: iugaza1
Bill Idsardi (University of Maryland): Stress, computation, and the Chomsky hierarchy
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti......
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
wn.com/Bill Idsardi (University Of Maryland) Stress, Computation, And The Chomsky Hierarchy
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
Paul Kiparsky (Stanford): From Germanic stress to Scandinavian pitch accent
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti......
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
wn.com/Paul Kiparsky (Stanford) From Germanic Stress To Scandinavian Pitch Accent
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
Session 1 | 21F.223 Listening, Speaking, and Pronunciation
Lecture 18: Word Stress (cont.); Stress in Compounds. View the complete course at: http://ocw.mit.edu/21F-223F04 License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More info......
Lecture 18: Word Stress (cont.); Stress in Compounds. View the complete course at: http://ocw.mit.edu/21F-223F04 License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More info...
wn.com/Session 1 | 21F.223 Listening, Speaking, And Pronunciation
Lecture 18: Word Stress (cont.); Stress in Compounds. View the complete course at: http://ocw.mit.edu/21F-223F04 License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More info...
Phonology - PDE Connected Speech
This E-Lecture discusses and exemplifies the consequences of the rhythmic organization of spoken English as a stress-timed language: Assimilation, Elision, Weak...
This E-Lecture discusses and exemplifies the consequences of the rhythmic organization of spoken English as a stress-timed language: Assimilation, Elision, Weakening and Liaison. As usual Handke illustrates his arguments by numerous examples from PDE.
wn.com/Phonology Pde Connected Speech
This E-Lecture discusses and exemplifies the consequences of the rhythmic organization of spoken English as a stress-timed language: Assimilation, Elision, Weakening and Liaison. As usual Handke illustrates his arguments by numerous examples from PDE.
- published: 10 Jul 2012
- views: 15381
Syllable Stress and the Most Important Thing in Life
For Bad Words and Taboo Terms, an introductory class on the linguistics of swearing...
For Bad Words and Taboo Terms, an introductory class on the linguistics of swearing
wn.com/Syllable Stress And The Most Important Thing In Life
For Bad Words and Taboo Terms, an introductory class on the linguistics of swearing
- published: 23 Oct 2014
- views: 4
Julian Treasure: How to speak so that people want to listen
Have you ever felt like you're talking, but nobody is listening? Here's Julian Treasure to help you fix that. As the sound expert demonstrates some useful vocal...
Have you ever felt like you're talking, but nobody is listening? Here's Julian Treasure to help you fix that. As the sound expert demonstrates some useful vocal exercises and shares tips on how to speak with empathy, he offers his vision for a sonorous world of listening and understanding.
TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes (or less). Look for talks on Technology, Entertainment and Design -- plus science, business, global issues, the arts and much more.
Find closed captions and translated subtitles in many languages at http://www.ted.com/translate
Follow TED news on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tednews
Like TED on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TED
Subscribe to our channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/TEDtalksDirector
wn.com/Julian Treasure How To Speak So That People Want To Listen
Have you ever felt like you're talking, but nobody is listening? Here's Julian Treasure to help you fix that. As the sound expert demonstrates some useful vocal exercises and shares tips on how to speak with empathy, he offers his vision for a sonorous world of listening and understanding.
TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes (or less). Look for talks on Technology, Entertainment and Design -- plus science, business, global issues, the arts and much more.
Find closed captions and translated subtitles in many languages at http://www.ted.com/translate
Follow TED news on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tednews
Like TED on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TED
Subscribe to our channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/TEDtalksDirector
- published: 27 Jun 2014
- views: 1172683
Hangout Don't Stress Over Sentence Stress!
captioned,subtitled,videos,voa,learning,special,english,report,development,agriculture,food,farming,gardening,health,medicine,higher,education,international,stu...
captioned,subtitled,videos,voa,learning,special,english,report,development,agriculture,food,farming,gardening,health,medicine,higher,education,international,students,elementary,secondary,tertiary,university,college,economics,finance,american,business,communication,culture,download,history,foreign,controlled,language,learn,mp3,music,news,plain,radio,simplified,simple,speech,linguistics,teach,teacher,esl,efl,teaching,texts,transcripts,TV,u.s.,united,states,voice,of,america
wn.com/Hangout Don't Stress Over Sentence Stress
captioned,subtitled,videos,voa,learning,special,english,report,development,agriculture,food,farming,gardening,health,medicine,higher,education,international,students,elementary,secondary,tertiary,university,college,economics,finance,american,business,communication,culture,download,history,foreign,controlled,language,learn,mp3,music,news,plain,radio,simplified,simple,speech,linguistics,teach,teacher,esl,efl,teaching,texts,transcripts,TV,u.s.,united,states,voice,of,america
- published: 23 Sep 2014
- views: 1
Hangout: Part 2: "Don't Stress Over Sentence Stress!"
On TALK2US: English teacher Lida Baker returns with another lesson in sentence stress, explaining which words are normally emphasized or not emphasized in speec...
On TALK2US: English teacher Lida Baker returns with another lesson in sentence stress, explaining which words are normally emphasized or not emphasized in speech. She works with Loren, a chemist...
wn.com/Hangout Part 2 Don't Stress Over Sentence Stress
On TALK2US: English teacher Lida Baker returns with another lesson in sentence stress, explaining which words are normally emphasized or not emphasized in speech. She works with Loren, a chemist...
How Stress Affects Mental Bandwidth
captioned,subtitled,videos,voa,learning,special,english,report,development,agriculture,food,farming,gardening,health,medicine,higher,education,international,stu...
captioned,subtitled,videos,voa,learning,special,english,report,development,agriculture,food,farming,gardening,health,medicine,higher,education,international,students,elementary,secondary,tertiary,university,college,economics,finance,american,business,communication,culture,download,history,foreign,controlled,language,learn,mp3,music,news,plain,radio,simplified,simple,speech,linguistics,teach,teacher,esl,efl,teaching,texts,transcripts,TV,u.s.,united,states,voice,of,america
wn.com/How Stress Affects Mental Bandwidth
captioned,subtitled,videos,voa,learning,special,english,report,development,agriculture,food,farming,gardening,health,medicine,higher,education,international,students,elementary,secondary,tertiary,university,college,economics,finance,american,business,communication,culture,download,history,foreign,controlled,language,learn,mp3,music,news,plain,radio,simplified,simple,speech,linguistics,teach,teacher,esl,efl,teaching,texts,transcripts,TV,u.s.,united,states,voice,of,america
- published: 23 Sep 2014
- views: 0
Four Elements University Crack - Freeze's Diary
Oh, nothing like a good crack to get stress relief (throws linguistics book across the floor). Funny how just some little pieces come back to work....
Oh, nothing like a good crack to get stress relief (throws linguistics book across the floor). Funny how just some little pieces come back to work.
wn.com/Four Elements University Crack Freeze's Diary
Oh, nothing like a good crack to get stress relief (throws linguistics book across the floor). Funny how just some little pieces come back to work.
- published: 14 Nov 2013
- views: 185
Morris Halle (MIT): On the morpho-phonology of the Latin verb
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti......
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
wn.com/Morris Halle (Mit) On The Morpho Phonology Of The Latin Verb
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
2014 Linguistics & TESOL Symposium at SJSU
Sequence of talks with timestamps listed below. Sorry about the audio quality. Camerawork: Michal Rudzki. Editing: Lorenzo Tlacaelel L.
00:15:00 - An exami...
Sequence of talks with timestamps listed below. Sorry about the audio quality. Camerawork: Michal Rudzki. Editing: Lorenzo Tlacaelel L.
00:15:00 - An examination of the English posture verbs sit, stand, and lie. Leslie Bank
00:36:00 - Initial Consonant Mutation in Irish. Janine Robinson
00:50:40 - Small talk on Airplanes. Joshua Lawrence
01:10:00 - Syllabification and Stress pattern in Hinko. Haroon ur Rashid
01:34:00 - The role of lexical chunks in Chinese as Second Language Acquisition - for Mandarin Chinese as second language learners. Jinxiao Song
01:52:00 - Pahari Language in Azad Kashmir Exhibiting Patterns of Language Shift. Naveed Sarwar
02:14:00 - The Other within Self: Communication between Teachers and Students in Academic Writing Contexts. Robert Lanz
02:31:00 - Interrogation in 4 Southern Zapotec Variants. Lorenzo Tlacaelel L.
02:51:40 - Voiceless Stop Contrasts in Alemanic German. Annika Ronay
03:08:15 - Upward and onward: Going up on in Modern Hebrew. Netta Ben-Meir
03:25:10 - The Nature of Ergative Case Marking in Pahari. Shahida Khalique
03:35:00 - Systematicity/Orderliness in Overlapping: An Analysis of Ordinary Pahari Conversation. Qudsia Ishaq.
03:51:00 - The Role of Phonetic Forces Behind Neutral Vowels in Vowel Harmony. Kateryna Shilova
wn.com/2014 Linguistics Tesol Symposium At Sjsu
Sequence of talks with timestamps listed below. Sorry about the audio quality. Camerawork: Michal Rudzki. Editing: Lorenzo Tlacaelel L.
00:15:00 - An examination of the English posture verbs sit, stand, and lie. Leslie Bank
00:36:00 - Initial Consonant Mutation in Irish. Janine Robinson
00:50:40 - Small talk on Airplanes. Joshua Lawrence
01:10:00 - Syllabification and Stress pattern in Hinko. Haroon ur Rashid
01:34:00 - The role of lexical chunks in Chinese as Second Language Acquisition - for Mandarin Chinese as second language learners. Jinxiao Song
01:52:00 - Pahari Language in Azad Kashmir Exhibiting Patterns of Language Shift. Naveed Sarwar
02:14:00 - The Other within Self: Communication between Teachers and Students in Academic Writing Contexts. Robert Lanz
02:31:00 - Interrogation in 4 Southern Zapotec Variants. Lorenzo Tlacaelel L.
02:51:40 - Voiceless Stop Contrasts in Alemanic German. Annika Ronay
03:08:15 - Upward and onward: Going up on in Modern Hebrew. Netta Ben-Meir
03:25:10 - The Nature of Ergative Case Marking in Pahari. Shahida Khalique
03:35:00 - Systematicity/Orderliness in Overlapping: An Analysis of Ordinary Pahari Conversation. Qudsia Ishaq.
03:51:00 - The Role of Phonetic Forces Behind Neutral Vowels in Vowel Harmony. Kateryna Shilova
- published: 30 Sep 2014
- views: 62
How Much Can We Adjust Our Second Language Grammars? Parameter Resetting
How do we change our grammars when we pick up a new language? Is there a limit to how much we can shift? In this week's episode, we talk about parameter resetti...
How do we change our grammars when we pick up a new language? Is there a limit to how much we can shift? In this week's episode, we talk about parameter resetting in second language acquisition: how quickly we can change our transferred grammar, whether there's a difference in ability between children and adults, and whether there are some areas where we might be unable to adjust.
This is Topic #57!
This week's tag language: Haida!
Related topics:
Linguistic Baggage - Transfer in Second Language Acquisition: https://youtu.be/UB18y2ZYBiY
A Principled Approach - Principles and Parameters in Universal Grammar: https://youtu.be/GbK0ls7YVN4
Last episode:
Recovering History: Reconstructing Languages - https://youtu.be/p7ppktfdNCk
Other of our language acquisition videos:
Kids Be Fronting: Child Phonological Speech Errors - https://youtu.be/EDymvzP0uac
Negative Space: Negative Evidence and Language Acquisition - https://youtu.be/a7Un06tDOn0
Child Actors and Child Judges: Testing Children's Language Abilities - https://youtu.be/NJ5lLNBabGc
Find us on all the social media worlds:
Tumblr: http://thelingspace.tumblr.com/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/TheLingSpace
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/thelingspace/
And at our website, http://www.thelingspace.com/ !
You can also find our store at the website, https://thelingspace.storenvy.com/
Our website also has extra content about this week's topic at http://www.thelingspace.com/episode-57/
(Although it's going to be a bit before it's up, because I'm traveling for a conference just now.)
We also have forums to discuss this episode, and linguistics more generally.
Sources:
There's a good discussion of parameter resetting in Lydia White's 2003 book, Second Language Acquisition and Universal Grammar, if you want more background on the topic.
The Erdem study: Haznedar, B. 1997. L2 acquisition by a Turkish-speaking child: evidence for L1 influence. In E Hughes, M Hughes, and A Greenhill (eds), Proceedings of the 21st Annual Boston University Conference on Language Development, 245-256.
French verb movement study: White, L. 1992. Long and short verb movement in second language acquisition. Canadian Journal of Linguistics 37: 273-286.
Chinese adverb study: Yuan, B. 2001. The status of thematic verbs in the second language acquisition of Chinese. Second Language Research 17: 248-272.
Turkish stress study: Özçelik, Ö. 2012. Representation and acquisition of stress: the case of Turkish. PhD Thesis, McGill University.
Adverbs discussion:
It turns out that in the study we mentioned, French learners of English didn't place their adverbs in the same places that English speakers did, often having them appear after the tensed verb, as opposed to what we find in English. There are a few possibilities to explain this, including having another placement for adverbs later on in the sentence, as well as potentially the IP being more complex than just one solitary I, including spaces for tense, agreement, and arguably more. There are other studies that look at this in more detail, and we'll link to a couple of them here soon!
Looking forward to next week!
wn.com/How Much Can We Adjust Our Second Language Grammars Parameter Resetting
How do we change our grammars when we pick up a new language? Is there a limit to how much we can shift? In this week's episode, we talk about parameter resetting in second language acquisition: how quickly we can change our transferred grammar, whether there's a difference in ability between children and adults, and whether there are some areas where we might be unable to adjust.
This is Topic #57!
This week's tag language: Haida!
Related topics:
Linguistic Baggage - Transfer in Second Language Acquisition: https://youtu.be/UB18y2ZYBiY
A Principled Approach - Principles and Parameters in Universal Grammar: https://youtu.be/GbK0ls7YVN4
Last episode:
Recovering History: Reconstructing Languages - https://youtu.be/p7ppktfdNCk
Other of our language acquisition videos:
Kids Be Fronting: Child Phonological Speech Errors - https://youtu.be/EDymvzP0uac
Negative Space: Negative Evidence and Language Acquisition - https://youtu.be/a7Un06tDOn0
Child Actors and Child Judges: Testing Children's Language Abilities - https://youtu.be/NJ5lLNBabGc
Find us on all the social media worlds:
Tumblr: http://thelingspace.tumblr.com/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/TheLingSpace
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/thelingspace/
And at our website, http://www.thelingspace.com/ !
You can also find our store at the website, https://thelingspace.storenvy.com/
Our website also has extra content about this week's topic at http://www.thelingspace.com/episode-57/
(Although it's going to be a bit before it's up, because I'm traveling for a conference just now.)
We also have forums to discuss this episode, and linguistics more generally.
Sources:
There's a good discussion of parameter resetting in Lydia White's 2003 book, Second Language Acquisition and Universal Grammar, if you want more background on the topic.
The Erdem study: Haznedar, B. 1997. L2 acquisition by a Turkish-speaking child: evidence for L1 influence. In E Hughes, M Hughes, and A Greenhill (eds), Proceedings of the 21st Annual Boston University Conference on Language Development, 245-256.
French verb movement study: White, L. 1992. Long and short verb movement in second language acquisition. Canadian Journal of Linguistics 37: 273-286.
Chinese adverb study: Yuan, B. 2001. The status of thematic verbs in the second language acquisition of Chinese. Second Language Research 17: 248-272.
Turkish stress study: Özçelik, Ö. 2012. Representation and acquisition of stress: the case of Turkish. PhD Thesis, McGill University.
Adverbs discussion:
It turns out that in the study we mentioned, French learners of English didn't place their adverbs in the same places that English speakers did, often having them appear after the tensed verb, as opposed to what we find in English. There are a few possibilities to explain this, including having another placement for adverbs later on in the sentence, as well as potentially the IP being more complex than just one solitary I, including spaces for tense, agreement, and arguably more. There are other studies that look at this in more detail, and we'll link to a couple of them here soon!
Looking forward to next week!
- published: 06 Jan 2016
- views: 548
Nigel Fabb (Strathclyde University): The metrical line, and prosodic phrasing in performance
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti......
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
wn.com/Nigel Fabb (Strathclyde University) The Metrical Line, And Prosodic Phrasing In Performance
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
Stress in Space - Judging an Astronaut's Mental State
Being an astronaut is stressful. But astronauts aren’t the best at admitting when they’re feeling the strain. An innovative research project uses speech analysi...
Being an astronaut is stressful. But astronauts aren’t the best at admitting when they’re feeling the strain. An innovative research project uses speech analysis to spot hints of underlying anxieties.
Day 19 of our advent calendar, A Place Called Space http://rigb.org/advent
Being an astronaut is a stressful job. You face the constant threat of annihilation, and know that a huge team and expensive mission rely on you doing your job well.
But astronauts aren’t always the best at identifying, or admitting, when they’re stressed or overwhelmed. Sarita Robinson, a psychologist from the University of Central Lancaster, says that while we’re increasingly comfortable with the intense physiological conditions of space travel, our understanding of the psychological impacts still leaves something to be desired. Mark Huckvale and a team at University College London ran a research project that investigated whether subtle variations in speech patterns of astronauts taking part in the Mars 500 experiment might reveal anxieties that the astronauts’ words were hiding.
Could subtle cues in the way an astronaut speaks let mission control know when they’re starting to feel the strain?
‘A Place Called Space’ is the 2015 Royal Institution advent calendar. Every day in the run up to Christmas we'll be releasing an original piece of content exploring the human experience and cultural significance of space travel. With hand-drawn animations, experiments in zero gravity, interviews with astronauts and creative data visualisations, the calendar will fire you into space every morning.
'A Place Called Space' channels the voices of seasoned astronauts and expert scientists through the eyes of a team of talented animators, film-makers and artists, bringing you a thought-provoking gem to kick-start each day.
Check it out at http://rigb.org/advent
Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibe
Watch more science videos on the Ri Channel http://richannel.org
The Ri is on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ri_science
and Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/royalinstitution
and Tumblr: http://ri-science.tumblr.com/
Subscribe for the latest science videos: http://richannel.org/newsletter
wn.com/Stress In Space Judging An Astronaut's Mental State
Being an astronaut is stressful. But astronauts aren’t the best at admitting when they’re feeling the strain. An innovative research project uses speech analysis to spot hints of underlying anxieties.
Day 19 of our advent calendar, A Place Called Space http://rigb.org/advent
Being an astronaut is a stressful job. You face the constant threat of annihilation, and know that a huge team and expensive mission rely on you doing your job well.
But astronauts aren’t always the best at identifying, or admitting, when they’re stressed or overwhelmed. Sarita Robinson, a psychologist from the University of Central Lancaster, says that while we’re increasingly comfortable with the intense physiological conditions of space travel, our understanding of the psychological impacts still leaves something to be desired. Mark Huckvale and a team at University College London ran a research project that investigated whether subtle variations in speech patterns of astronauts taking part in the Mars 500 experiment might reveal anxieties that the astronauts’ words were hiding.
Could subtle cues in the way an astronaut speaks let mission control know when they’re starting to feel the strain?
‘A Place Called Space’ is the 2015 Royal Institution advent calendar. Every day in the run up to Christmas we'll be releasing an original piece of content exploring the human experience and cultural significance of space travel. With hand-drawn animations, experiments in zero gravity, interviews with astronauts and creative data visualisations, the calendar will fire you into space every morning.
'A Place Called Space' channels the voices of seasoned astronauts and expert scientists through the eyes of a team of talented animators, film-makers and artists, bringing you a thought-provoking gem to kick-start each day.
Check it out at http://rigb.org/advent
Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibe
Watch more science videos on the Ri Channel http://richannel.org
The Ri is on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ri_science
and Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/royalinstitution
and Tumblr: http://ri-science.tumblr.com/
Subscribe for the latest science videos: http://richannel.org/newsletter
- published: 19 Dec 2015
- views: 2309
Bruce Hayes (UCLA): Milton, Maxent, and the Russian method
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti......
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
wn.com/Bruce Hayes (Ucla) Milton, Maxent, And The Russian Method
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
-
Stress In English and Arabic - 2
الجامعة الإسلامية -- غزة iugaza/ مساق: علم اللغة المقارن Comparative Linguistics/ د. وليد محمد عامر.
-
Junko Ito, Armin Mester (UC Santa Cruz): Supersized Units
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
-
John Halle (Bard): Reconciling Text Setting and Poetic Form within Generative Metrics
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
-
Forensic Linguist As Detective & Expert Witness: an Inaugural Lecture by Professor Malcolm Coulthard
Linguists are frequently asked to help the police and courts when there is a dispute over the authorship of a written text -- suicide note, abusive or threat...
-
Mark Liberman (Penn): Design for a corpus of scanned verse
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
-
Tonal Variation in Bantu Language Varieties, SOAS, University of London
This linguistics seminar titled "Tonal Variation in Bantu Language Varieties: The Case of Ikoma-Nata-Isenye" was given by Dr Lotta Aunio, University of Helsinki at SOAS, University on 19 November 2013 (http://bit.ly/11ougca).
Find out more about studying Linguistics at SOAS at http://www.soas.ac.uk/linguistics
Abstract:
The dialects of Ikoma, Nata, and Isenye are classified as a single language
-
[Introduction to Linguistics] Consonants - Production and Transcription
Visit our website: http://bit.ly/1zBPlvm
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/1vWiRxW
Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1vWwDRc
For practice describing the consonants. http://depts.washington.edu/lingsup/ling200/cons-descr.php
For listening to all the sounds
https://www.llas.ac.uk/materialsbank/mb081/page_09.htm
For practicing transcription and matching English words.
http://www.tedpower.co.u
-
Alan Prince (Rutgers): Metrical Theory as a Portal on Theory
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguistics and Philosophy of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on September 20 and 21,2013.
http://m90.mit.edu/
-
General discussion Day 1
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
-
Abraham, Hagar's Rape, & Fascism
I have this on my phone but can't seem to download it in totality due to memory capabilities. So, this is a creative solution under my current technological access. This was done about early June, I've made quite significant progress since. I uncovered the Fraternal Order of Police and their relationship to Bar Associates (judges & states' & federal Attorney Generals, especially), as a ranking sys
-
50 years of Linguistics at MIT, Lecture 9
The notion of derivations in linguistics: Howard Lasnik (1972), Andrew Nevins (2005), Paul Kiparsky (1965), Tom Bever (1967)
from "50 Years of Linguistics at MIT: a Scientific Reunion"
(December 9-11, 2011)
http://ling50.mit.edu
Video courtesy of Video Visuals
-
Inaugural Fillmore Lecture by Dan Jurafsky @ 2015 Linguistics Summer Institute
"Extracting social meaning from language: The computational linguistics of food, innovation, and community"
Lecture by Dan Jurafsky, Fillmore Professor, at the Charles M. Harper Center. John Rickford, the president of the LSA, introduced both Dan Jurafsky and Lilly Wong Fillmore.
-
Harry Mamaysky: Does Unusual News Forecast Market Stress?
On October 6, 2015, Harry Mamaysky, Adjunct Professor of Finance and Economics at Columbia Business School, presented Does Unusual News Forecast Market Stress? The presentation was part of the Program for Financial Studies' No Free Lunch Seminar Series titled Current Research on Forecasting Risk.
The Program for Financial Studies' No Free Lunch Seminar Series provides broader community access to
-
McCarthy, Pater and Pruitt (UMass, Amherst; Arizona State University): Cross-level interactions
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
Stress In English and Arabic - 2
الجامعة الإسلامية -- غزة iugaza/ مساق: علم اللغة المقارن Comparative Linguistics/ د. وليد محمد عامر....
الجامعة الإسلامية -- غزة iugaza/ مساق: علم اللغة المقارن Comparative Linguistics/ د. وليد محمد عامر.
wn.com/Stress In English And Arabic 2
الجامعة الإسلامية -- غزة iugaza/ مساق: علم اللغة المقارن Comparative Linguistics/ د. وليد محمد عامر.
- published: 07 Oct 2012
- views: 223
-
author: iugaza1
Junko Ito, Armin Mester (UC Santa Cruz): Supersized Units
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti......
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
wn.com/Junko Ito, Armin Mester (Uc Santa Cruz) Supersized Units
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
John Halle (Bard): Reconciling Text Setting and Poetic Form within Generative Metrics
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti......
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
wn.com/John Halle (Bard) Reconciling Text Setting And Poetic Form Within Generative Metrics
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
Forensic Linguist As Detective & Expert Witness: an Inaugural Lecture by Professor Malcolm Coulthard
Linguists are frequently asked to help the police and courts when there is a dispute over the authorship of a written text -- suicide note, abusive or threat......
Linguists are frequently asked to help the police and courts when there is a dispute over the authorship of a written text -- suicide note, abusive or threat...
wn.com/Forensic Linguist As Detective Expert Witness An Inaugural Lecture By Professor Malcolm Coulthard
Linguists are frequently asked to help the police and courts when there is a dispute over the authorship of a written text -- suicide note, abusive or threat...
Mark Liberman (Penn): Design for a corpus of scanned verse
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti......
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
wn.com/Mark Liberman (Penn) Design For A Corpus Of Scanned Verse
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
Tonal Variation in Bantu Language Varieties, SOAS, University of London
This linguistics seminar titled "Tonal Variation in Bantu Language Varieties: The Case of Ikoma-Nata-Isenye" was given by Dr Lotta Aunio, University of Helsinki...
This linguistics seminar titled "Tonal Variation in Bantu Language Varieties: The Case of Ikoma-Nata-Isenye" was given by Dr Lotta Aunio, University of Helsinki at SOAS, University on 19 November 2013 (http://bit.ly/11ougca).
Find out more about studying Linguistics at SOAS at http://www.soas.ac.uk/linguistics
Abstract:
The dialects of Ikoma, Nata, and Isenye are classified as a single language E(J)45 in the updated Guthrie’s list (Maho 2003). These varieties are spoken in the Mara Region (Western Tanzania) by approximately 30,000 speakers. The speakers of these three varieties use these names as ethnonyms and identify themselves with these names. All three varieties seem to be mutually intelligible, if only with minor difficulties and adaptation. However, the nominal tone systems in these varieties vary considerably.
All three varieties have two level tones, which are analysed as H and Ø (nothing), since only the H tones interact with each other. L tone is assigned as a default to any syllable that is not associated with a H after the tonal rules.
On surface level, many nouns in all three varieties have the same tonal realizations, which leads to the first assumption that these varieties have the same underlying organization of the tones. When comparing the nominal tone systems we will see that, despite similar surface forms, the underlying tonal systems in these three varieties are typologically different.
Hyman (2009) presents two criteria for stress languages:
a. OBLIGATORINESS: every lexical word has AT LEAST one syllable marked for the highest degree of metrical prominence (primary stress)
b. CULMINATIVITY: every lexical word has AT MOST one syllable marked for the highest degree of metrical prominence.
I will show that Nata meets both criteria for stress languages and can thus be analyzed as a stress system in which a H tone represents the highest prominence in a word (Anghelescu 2013). In Isenye, only the criterion for obligatoriness is satisfied, whereas Ikoma has to be analyzed as a tonal language since it fulfills neither of the criteria.
Anghelescu, A. 2013. Morphophonology and tone in Nata. Paper presented at the Bantu 5 conference, Paris, 12–15 June 2013.
Hyman, L.M. 2009. How (not) to do phonological typology: the case of pitch-accent. Language Sciences 31:213–238.
Maho, J. 2003. A classification of the Bantu languages: an update of Guthrie’s referential system. In Nurse & Philippson (eds), The Bantu Languages, 639–651.
wn.com/Tonal Variation In Bantu Language Varieties, Soas, University Of London
This linguistics seminar titled "Tonal Variation in Bantu Language Varieties: The Case of Ikoma-Nata-Isenye" was given by Dr Lotta Aunio, University of Helsinki at SOAS, University on 19 November 2013 (http://bit.ly/11ougca).
Find out more about studying Linguistics at SOAS at http://www.soas.ac.uk/linguistics
Abstract:
The dialects of Ikoma, Nata, and Isenye are classified as a single language E(J)45 in the updated Guthrie’s list (Maho 2003). These varieties are spoken in the Mara Region (Western Tanzania) by approximately 30,000 speakers. The speakers of these three varieties use these names as ethnonyms and identify themselves with these names. All three varieties seem to be mutually intelligible, if only with minor difficulties and adaptation. However, the nominal tone systems in these varieties vary considerably.
All three varieties have two level tones, which are analysed as H and Ø (nothing), since only the H tones interact with each other. L tone is assigned as a default to any syllable that is not associated with a H after the tonal rules.
On surface level, many nouns in all three varieties have the same tonal realizations, which leads to the first assumption that these varieties have the same underlying organization of the tones. When comparing the nominal tone systems we will see that, despite similar surface forms, the underlying tonal systems in these three varieties are typologically different.
Hyman (2009) presents two criteria for stress languages:
a. OBLIGATORINESS: every lexical word has AT LEAST one syllable marked for the highest degree of metrical prominence (primary stress)
b. CULMINATIVITY: every lexical word has AT MOST one syllable marked for the highest degree of metrical prominence.
I will show that Nata meets both criteria for stress languages and can thus be analyzed as a stress system in which a H tone represents the highest prominence in a word (Anghelescu 2013). In Isenye, only the criterion for obligatoriness is satisfied, whereas Ikoma has to be analyzed as a tonal language since it fulfills neither of the criteria.
Anghelescu, A. 2013. Morphophonology and tone in Nata. Paper presented at the Bantu 5 conference, Paris, 12–15 June 2013.
Hyman, L.M. 2009. How (not) to do phonological typology: the case of pitch-accent. Language Sciences 31:213–238.
Maho, J. 2003. A classification of the Bantu languages: an update of Guthrie’s referential system. In Nurse & Philippson (eds), The Bantu Languages, 639–651.
- published: 18 Nov 2014
- views: 4
[Introduction to Linguistics] Consonants - Production and Transcription
Visit our website: http://bit.ly/1zBPlvm
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/1vWiRxW
Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1vWwDRc
For practice describing the c...
Visit our website: http://bit.ly/1zBPlvm
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/1vWiRxW
Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1vWwDRc
For practice describing the consonants. http://depts.washington.edu/lingsup/ling200/cons-descr.php
For listening to all the sounds
https://www.llas.ac.uk/materialsbank/mb081/page_09.htm
For practicing transcription and matching English words.
http://www.tedpower.co.uk/phonetics.htm
Today we look at the production and transcription of consonants in English. There is a lot in this video, and there is no way you can grasp it all in one go. Please take the time to study the IPA chart, and do your own practice transcriptions.
Hello, welcome to TheTrevTutor. I'm here to help you learn your college courses in an easy, efficient manner. If you like what you see, feel free to subscribe and follow me for updates. If you have any questions, leave them below. I try to answer as many questions as possible. If something isn't quite clear or needs more explanation, I can easily make additional videos to satisfy your need for knowledge and understanding.
wn.com/Introduction To Linguistics Consonants Production And Transcription
Visit our website: http://bit.ly/1zBPlvm
Subscribe on YouTube: http://bit.ly/1vWiRxW
Like us on Facebook: http://on.fb.me/1vWwDRc
For practice describing the consonants. http://depts.washington.edu/lingsup/ling200/cons-descr.php
For listening to all the sounds
https://www.llas.ac.uk/materialsbank/mb081/page_09.htm
For practicing transcription and matching English words.
http://www.tedpower.co.uk/phonetics.htm
Today we look at the production and transcription of consonants in English. There is a lot in this video, and there is no way you can grasp it all in one go. Please take the time to study the IPA chart, and do your own practice transcriptions.
Hello, welcome to TheTrevTutor. I'm here to help you learn your college courses in an easy, efficient manner. If you like what you see, feel free to subscribe and follow me for updates. If you have any questions, leave them below. I try to answer as many questions as possible. If something isn't quite clear or needs more explanation, I can easily make additional videos to satisfy your need for knowledge and understanding.
- published: 01 Apr 2015
- views: 1
Alan Prince (Rutgers): Metrical Theory as a Portal on Theory
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguistics ...
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguistics and Philosophy of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on September 20 and 21,2013.
http://m90.mit.edu/
wn.com/Alan Prince (Rutgers) Metrical Theory As A Portal On Theory
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguistics and Philosophy of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on September 20 and 21,2013.
http://m90.mit.edu/
- published: 18 Oct 2013
- views: 569
General discussion Day 1
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti......
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
wn.com/General Discussion Day 1
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
Abraham, Hagar's Rape, & Fascism
I have this on my phone but can't seem to download it in totality due to memory capabilities. So, this is a creative solution under my current technological acc...
I have this on my phone but can't seem to download it in totality due to memory capabilities. So, this is a creative solution under my current technological access. This was done about early June, I've made quite significant progress since. I uncovered the Fraternal Order of Police and their relationship to Bar Associates (judges & states' & federal Attorney Generals, especially), as a ranking system of the Imperial court. I discovered Nietzsche's version of Antichrist. While I spilt on a distinction between ANY portion of the Bible sources as originating from a nonmanufacture Imperialized state of constant trauma & stress stimuli, all linguistics aside. Oh! I Was able to reveal, pointlessly but accurately, that FOP as a "priestly order of knights", that not only do they share their founding day (maybe resurrection day?) with the man I indict as an imperial agent of mind boggling depravity, Prescott Sheldon Bush, but that this year in which they are celebrating their centennial festivities, in the first 6 months they have already killed over 500 " American Citizens"! Basic linguistics tell me that is a religious endeavor, or rite, not so much ritual, properly prescribe the Greek word: holocausts (as in each one, not just a collective achievement, like a company goal, as opposed to a predetermined quota). I thoroughly indulged in Skull & Bones, as an effort to intensify my calls for his death, no trail necessary, we all know that's enough. We ALL know, that should be enough as a step one. But that got me to Antony Sutton, Carroll Quigley, & Behold A Pale Horse (I assume that role in this narrative to Imperialized drones). Decoded the Imperial thread through it all: Rhodesia helped immensely. Having such a intricate look see, I figure I will spend the next 2.5 years developing it and write a book at 40, ending my writing career by 45. My safety is in my beyond reasonable manner of delivery, right now. It's protects me from being taken seriously, as well as positions me to be unable to apologize for what's already been said. Allowing the conversation to negate me easily. Some times I deliver to proper, I don't care what people think anymore, I seek to impact how you all feel, about it. Hating the world will make it easier for you to (I will use it for simplicity, but I reject this shit) "love" Mother Earth. That's is step one... Nietzsche clarified the role of PITY, giving me the keystone I set out to find! Thank you!
wn.com/Abraham, Hagar's Rape, Fascism
I have this on my phone but can't seem to download it in totality due to memory capabilities. So, this is a creative solution under my current technological access. This was done about early June, I've made quite significant progress since. I uncovered the Fraternal Order of Police and their relationship to Bar Associates (judges & states' & federal Attorney Generals, especially), as a ranking system of the Imperial court. I discovered Nietzsche's version of Antichrist. While I spilt on a distinction between ANY portion of the Bible sources as originating from a nonmanufacture Imperialized state of constant trauma & stress stimuli, all linguistics aside. Oh! I Was able to reveal, pointlessly but accurately, that FOP as a "priestly order of knights", that not only do they share their founding day (maybe resurrection day?) with the man I indict as an imperial agent of mind boggling depravity, Prescott Sheldon Bush, but that this year in which they are celebrating their centennial festivities, in the first 6 months they have already killed over 500 " American Citizens"! Basic linguistics tell me that is a religious endeavor, or rite, not so much ritual, properly prescribe the Greek word: holocausts (as in each one, not just a collective achievement, like a company goal, as opposed to a predetermined quota). I thoroughly indulged in Skull & Bones, as an effort to intensify my calls for his death, no trail necessary, we all know that's enough. We ALL know, that should be enough as a step one. But that got me to Antony Sutton, Carroll Quigley, & Behold A Pale Horse (I assume that role in this narrative to Imperialized drones). Decoded the Imperial thread through it all: Rhodesia helped immensely. Having such a intricate look see, I figure I will spend the next 2.5 years developing it and write a book at 40, ending my writing career by 45. My safety is in my beyond reasonable manner of delivery, right now. It's protects me from being taken seriously, as well as positions me to be unable to apologize for what's already been said. Allowing the conversation to negate me easily. Some times I deliver to proper, I don't care what people think anymore, I seek to impact how you all feel, about it. Hating the world will make it easier for you to (I will use it for simplicity, but I reject this shit) "love" Mother Earth. That's is step one... Nietzsche clarified the role of PITY, giving me the keystone I set out to find! Thank you!
- published: 11 Aug 2015
- views: 2
50 years of Linguistics at MIT, Lecture 9
The notion of derivations in linguistics: Howard Lasnik (1972), Andrew Nevins (2005), Paul Kiparsky (1965), Tom Bever (1967)
from "50 Years of Linguistics at M...
The notion of derivations in linguistics: Howard Lasnik (1972), Andrew Nevins (2005), Paul Kiparsky (1965), Tom Bever (1967)
from "50 Years of Linguistics at MIT: a Scientific Reunion"
(December 9-11, 2011)
http://ling50.mit.edu
Video courtesy of Video Visuals
wn.com/50 Years Of Linguistics At Mit, Lecture 9
The notion of derivations in linguistics: Howard Lasnik (1972), Andrew Nevins (2005), Paul Kiparsky (1965), Tom Bever (1967)
from "50 Years of Linguistics at MIT: a Scientific Reunion"
(December 9-11, 2011)
http://ling50.mit.edu
Video courtesy of Video Visuals
- published: 16 Dec 2011
- views: 4159
Inaugural Fillmore Lecture by Dan Jurafsky @ 2015 Linguistics Summer Institute
"Extracting social meaning from language: The computational linguistics of food, innovation, and community"
Lecture by Dan Jurafsky, Fillmore Professor, at the...
"Extracting social meaning from language: The computational linguistics of food, innovation, and community"
Lecture by Dan Jurafsky, Fillmore Professor, at the Charles M. Harper Center. John Rickford, the president of the LSA, introduced both Dan Jurafsky and Lilly Wong Fillmore.
wn.com/Inaugural Fillmore Lecture By Dan Jurafsky 2015 Linguistics Summer Institute
"Extracting social meaning from language: The computational linguistics of food, innovation, and community"
Lecture by Dan Jurafsky, Fillmore Professor, at the Charles M. Harper Center. John Rickford, the president of the LSA, introduced both Dan Jurafsky and Lilly Wong Fillmore.
- published: 27 Jul 2015
- views: 8
Harry Mamaysky: Does Unusual News Forecast Market Stress?
On October 6, 2015, Harry Mamaysky, Adjunct Professor of Finance and Economics at Columbia Business School, presented Does Unusual News Forecast Market Stress? ...
On October 6, 2015, Harry Mamaysky, Adjunct Professor of Finance and Economics at Columbia Business School, presented Does Unusual News Forecast Market Stress? The presentation was part of the Program for Financial Studies' No Free Lunch Seminar Series titled Current Research on Forecasting Risk.
The Program for Financial Studies' No Free Lunch Seminar Series provides broader community access to Columbia Business School faculty research. At each seminar, attended by invited MBA and PhD students, faculty members introduce their current research within an informal lunch setting.
Learn more at http://www8.gsb.columbia.edu/financialstudies/
wn.com/Harry Mamaysky Does Unusual News Forecast Market Stress
On October 6, 2015, Harry Mamaysky, Adjunct Professor of Finance and Economics at Columbia Business School, presented Does Unusual News Forecast Market Stress? The presentation was part of the Program for Financial Studies' No Free Lunch Seminar Series titled Current Research on Forecasting Risk.
The Program for Financial Studies' No Free Lunch Seminar Series provides broader community access to Columbia Business School faculty research. At each seminar, attended by invited MBA and PhD students, faculty members introduce their current research within an informal lunch setting.
Learn more at http://www8.gsb.columbia.edu/financialstudies/
- published: 14 Oct 2015
- views: 49
McCarthy, Pater and Pruitt (UMass, Amherst; Arizona State University): Cross-level interactions
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti......
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...
wn.com/Mccarthy, Pater And Pruitt (Umass, Amherst Arizona State University) Cross Level Interactions
From M@90, Metrical Structure: Stress, Meter and Textsetting, to celebrate Morris Halle's 90th birthday, a 2-day workshop held at The Department of Linguisti...