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2000 Japanese Yoruba Yoruba Japanese Vocabulary
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Book Synopsis 2000+ Japanese - Yoruba Yoruba - Japanese Vocabulary by : Jerry Greer
Download or read book 2000+ Japanese - Yoruba Yoruba - Japanese Vocabulary written by Jerry Greer and published by Soffer Publishing. This book was released on with total page 69 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: ""2000+ Japanese - Yoruba Yoruba - Japanese Vocabulary" - is a list of more than 2000 words translated from Japanese to Yoruba, as well as translated from Yoruba to Japanese.Easy to use- great for tourists and Japanese speakers interested in learning Yoruba. As well as Yoruba speakers interested in learning Japanese.
Book Synopsis 2000+ Japanese - Yoruba Yoruba - Japanese Vocabulary by : Jerry Greer
Download or read book 2000+ Japanese - Yoruba Yoruba - Japanese Vocabulary written by Jerry Greer and published by Soffer Publishing. This book was released on with total page 69 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: ""2000+ Japanese - Yoruba Yoruba - Japanese Vocabulary" - is a list of more than 2000 words translated from Japanese to Yoruba, as well as translated from Yoruba to Japanese.Easy to use- great for tourists and Japanese speakers interested in learning Yoruba. As well as Yoruba speakers interested in learning Japanese.
Book Synopsis African American Humor, Irony and Satire by : Dana A. Williams
Download or read book African American Humor, Irony and Satire written by Dana A. Williams and published by Cambridge Scholars Publishing. This book was released on 2009-03-26 with total page 170 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: African American Humor, Irony, and Satire: Ishmael Reed, Satirically Speaking includes select proceedings from the annual Heart’s Day Conference, sponsored by the Department of English at Howard University. Among the collection’s many strengths is the range of essays included here. Essays on Ishmael Reed center the collection, and satirists from George Schuyler to Aaron McGruder are examined as are popular culture comedians Richard Pryor and Dave Chappelle. Thus, the collection adds broadly to the body of scholarship on traditional and non-traditional interpretations of humor, irony, and satire. What these essays also reveal is how the lens of humor, irony, and satire as a way of reading texts is especially useful in highlighting the complexity of African American life and culture. The essays also uncover crucial but no so obvious connections between African Americans and other world cultures.
Book Synopsis Japanese as Foreign Language in the Age of Globalization by : Heinrich, Patrick
Download or read book Japanese as Foreign Language in the Age of Globalization written by Heinrich, Patrick and published by IUDICIUM Verlag. This book was released on 2008-09-09 with total page 267 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In our globalizing world of today, the significance, status and demand of languages are experiencing changes which are unmatched in human history. These changes also relate to the languages of Japan as well as to the way that they are being taught and studied. In this book 14 authors from four continents present their research results on Japanese as foreign language (JFL) in the age of globalization. The participation of these authors reflects the fact that research into JFL has itself become global. Since JFL in the age of globalization is a field too extensive to be comprehensively covered by a single book, we restricted ourselves to three topics which we believe are central in discussing this issue. New kinds of language learners and new teaching paradigmsNative – non-native speaker interaction or contact situations in a more general senseNew insights into cognitive processes in language learning
Book Synopsis Lexical Tone Perception in Infants and Young Children: Empirical studies and theoretical perspectives by : Leher Singh
Download or read book Lexical Tone Perception in Infants and Young Children: Empirical studies and theoretical perspectives written by Leher Singh and published by Frontiers Media SA. This book was released on 2019-11-20 with total page 270 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In psycholinguistic research there has traditionally been a strong emphasis on understanding how particular language types of are processed and learned . In particular, Romance and Germanic languages (e.g. English, French, German) have, until recently, received more attention than other types, such as Chinese languages. This has led to selective emphasis on the phonological building blocks of European languages, consonants and vowels, to the exclusion of lexical tones which, like consonants and vowels, determine lexical meaning, but unlike consonants and vowels are based on pitch variations. Lexical tone is pervasive; it is used in at least half of the world’ languages (Maddieson, 2013), e.g., most Asian and some African, Central American, and European languages. This Research Topic brings together a collection of recent empirical research on the processing and representation of lexical tones across the lifespan with an emphasis on advancing knowledge on how tone systems are acquired. The articles focus on various aspects of tone: early perception of tones, influences of tone on word learning, the acquisition of new tone systems, and production of tones. One set of articles report on tone perception at the earliest stage of development, in infants learning either tone or non-tone languages. Tsao and Chen et al. demonstrate that infants’ sensitivity to Mandarin lexical tones, as well as pitch, improves over the first year of life in native and non-native learners in contrast to traditional accounts of perceptual narrowing for consonants and vowels. Götz et al. report a different pattern of perception for Cantonese tones and further demonstrate influences of methodological approaches on infants’ tone sensitivity. Fan et al. demonstrate that sensitivity to less well-studied properties of tone languages, such as neutral tone, may develop after the first year of life. Cheng and Lee ask a similar question in an electrophysiological study and report effects of stimulus salience on infants’ neural response to native tones. In a complementary set of studies focused on tone sensitivity in word learning, Burnham et al. demonstrate that infants bind tones to newly-learned words if they are learning a tone language, either monolingually or bilingually; although it was also found that object-word binding was influenced by the properties of individual tones. Liu and Kager chart a developmental trajectory over the second year of life in which infants narrow in their interpretation of non-native tones. Choi et al. investigate how learning a tone language can influence uptake of other suprasegmental properties of language, such as stress, and demonstrate that native tone sensitivity in children can facilitate stress sensitivity when learning a stress-based language. Finally, two studies focus on sensitivity to pitch in a sub-class tone languages: pitch accent languages. In a study on Japanese children’s abilities to recognise words they know, Ota et al. demonstrate a limited sensitivity to native pitch contrasts in toddlers. In contrast, Ramachers et al. demonstrate comparatively strong sensitivity to pitch in native and non-native speakers of a different pitch accent system (Limburghian) when learning new words. Several studies focus on learning new tone systems. In a training study with school-aged children, Kasisopa et al. demonstrate that tone language experience increases children’s abilities to learn new tone contrasts. Poltrock et al. demonstrate similar advantages of tone experience in learning new tone systems in adults. And in an elecrophysiological study, Liu et al. demonstrate order effects in adults’ neural responses to new tones, discussing implications for learning tone languages as an adult. Finally, Hannah et al. demonstrate that extralinguistic cues, such as facial expression, can support adults’ learning of new tone systems. In three studies investigating tone production, Rattansone et al. report the results of a study demonstrating kindergartners’ asynchronous mastery of tones – delayed acquisition of tone sandhi forms relative to base forms. In a study interrogating a corpus of adult tone production, Han et al. demonstrate that mothers produce tones in a distinct manner when speaking to infants; tone differences are emphasised more when speaking to infants than to adults. Combining perception and production of tones, Wong et al. report asynchronous development of tone perception and tone production in children. The Research Topic also includes a series of Opinion pieces and Commentaries addressing the broader relevance of tone and pitch to the study of language acquisition. Curtin and Werker discuss ways in which tone can be integrated into their model of infant language development (PRIMIR). Best discusses the phonological status of lexical tones and considers how recent empirical research on tone perception bears on this question. Kager focuses on how language learners distinguish lexical tones from other sources of pitch variation (e.g., affective and pragmatic) that also inform language comprehension. Finally, Antoniou and Chin unite evidence of tone sensitivity from children and adults and discuss how these areas of research can be mutually informative. Psycholinguistic studies of lexical tone acquisition have burgeoned over the past 13 years. This collection of empirical studies and opinion pieces provides a state-of-the-art panoply of the psycholinguistic study of lexical tones, and demonstrate its coming of age. The articles in this Research Topic will help address the hitherto Eurocentric non-tone language research emphasis, and will contribute to an expanding narrative of speech perception, speech production, and language acquisition that includes all of the world’s languages. Importantly, these studies underline the scientific promise of drawing from tone languages in psycholinguistic research; the research questions raised by lexical tone are unique and distinct from those typically applied to more widely studied languages and populations. The comprehensive study of language acquisition can only benefit from this expanded focus.
Book Synopsis Syllable and Word Languages by : Javier Caro Reina
Download or read book Syllable and Word Languages written by Javier Caro Reina and published by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. This book was released on 2014-10-24 with total page 387 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This is the first volume concerned with the phonological typology of syllable and word languages, based on the model of a complex, multi-layered and hierarchically structured phonological system. The main typological claim is that the phonetic and phonological make-up of a language depends on the relevance of the prosodic categories. In previous research, the syllable and the phonological word have already proved to be typologically important. The contributions in this volume discuss theoretical questions and address issues such as the variable structure of the phonological word, the interplay between phonetics and phonology as well as the effect of a language’s phonological make-up on its morphology or lexicon. The volume provides detailed synchronic and diachronic analyses of (Non-)Indo-European languages which will serve as a basis for further typological research.
Book Synopsis Languages in Africa by : Elizabeth C. Zsiga
Download or read book Languages in Africa written by Elizabeth C. Zsiga and published by Georgetown University Press. This book was released on 2015-03-03 with total page 220 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: People in many African communities live within a series of concentric circles when it comes to language. In a small group, a speaker uses an often unwritten and endangered mother tongue that is rarely used in school. A national indigenous language—written, widespread, sometimes used in school—surrounds it. An international language like French or English, a vestige of colonialism, carries prestige, is used in higher education, and promises mobility—and yet it will not be well known by its users. The essays in Languages in Africa explore the layers of African multilingualism as they affect language policy and education. Through case studies ranging across the continent, the contributors consider multilingualism in the classroom as well as in domains ranging from music and film to politics and figurative language. The contributors report on the widespread devaluing and even death of indigenous languages. They also investigate how poor teacher training leads to language-related failures in education. At the same time, they demonstrate that education in a mother tongue can work, linguists can use their expertise to provoke changes in language policies, and linguistic creativity thrives in these multilingual communities.
Book Synopsis Computer-Assisted Foreign Language Teaching and Learning: Technological Advances by : Zou, Bin
Download or read book Computer-Assisted Foreign Language Teaching and Learning: Technological Advances written by Zou, Bin and published by IGI Global. This book was released on 2013-01-31 with total page 356 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Educational technologies continue to advance the ways in which we teach and learn. As these technologies continue to improve our communication with one another, computer-assisted foreign language learning has provided a more efficient way of communication between different languages. Computer-Assisted Foreign Language Teaching and Learning: Technological Advances highlights new research and an original framework that brings together foreign language teaching, experiments and testing practices that utilize the most recent and widely used e-learning resources. This comprehensive collection of research will offer linguistic scholars, language teachers, students, and policymakers a better understanding of the importance and influence of e-learning in second language acquisition.
Book Synopsis Bibliography of African language study by : 加賀谷良平
Download or read book Bibliography of African language study written by 加賀谷良平 and published by . This book was released on 2006 with total page 190 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:
Book Synopsis Ancient Text Messages of the Yoruba Bata Drum by : Amanda Villepastour
Download or read book Ancient Text Messages of the Yoruba Bata Drum written by Amanda Villepastour and published by Routledge. This book was released on 2016-12-05 with total page 168 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The bata is one of the most important and representative percussion traditions of the people in southwest Nigeria, and is now learnt and performed around the world. In Cuba, their own bata tradition derives from the Yoruba bata from Africa yet has had far more research attention than its African predecessor. Although the bata is one of the oldest known Yoruba drumming traditions, the drum and its unique language are now unfamiliar to many contemporary Yoruba people. Amanda Villepastour provides the first academic study of the bata's communication technology and the elaborate coded spoken language of bata drummers, which they refer to as 'ena bata'. Villepastour explains how the bata drummers' speech encoding method links into universal linguistic properties, unknown to the musicians themselves. The analysis draws the direct links between what is spoken in Yoruba, how Yoruba is transformed in to the coded language (ena), how ena prescribes the drum strokes and, finally, how listeners (and which listeners) extract linguistic meaning from what is drummed. The description and analysis of this unique musical system adds substantially to what is known about bata drumming specifically, Yoruba drumming generally, speech surrogacy in music and coded systems of speaking. This book will appeal not only to ethnomusicologists and anthropologists, but also to linguists, drummers and those interested in African Studies.
Book Synopsis Discourse and Context in Language Teaching by : Marianne Celce-Murcia
Download or read book Discourse and Context in Language Teaching written by Marianne Celce-Murcia and published by Cambridge University Press. This book was released on 2000 with total page 235 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Recommends that language teachers incorporate discourse and pragmatics in their teaching if they wish to implement a communicative approach in their classrooms. The authors show how a discourse perspective can enhance the teaching of traditional areas of linguistic knowledge and language skills.
Book Synopsis Semblance and Signification by : Pascal Michelucci
Download or read book Semblance and Signification written by Pascal Michelucci and published by John Benjamins Publishing. This book was released on 2011-11-23 with total page 441 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The articles assembled in Semblance and Signification explore linguistic and literary structures from a range of theoretical perspectives with a view to understanding the extent, prevalence, productivity, and limitations of iconically grounded forms of semiosis. With the complementary examination of large theoretical issues, extensive corpus analysis in several modern languages such as Italian, Japanese Sign Language, and English, and applied close studies across a range of artistic media, this volume brings a fresh understanding of the cognitive underpinnings of iconicity. If primary and secondary modelling systems are rarely studied in tandem, it is clear from this volume that their fruitful juxtaposition yields striking insight into the cognitive concerns that pervade current semiotic research.
Book Synopsis The Development of Prosodic Structure in Early Words by : Mitsuhiko Ota
Download or read book The Development of Prosodic Structure in Early Words written by Mitsuhiko Ota and published by John Benjamins Publishing. This book was released on 2003-12-19 with total page 236 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This monograph addresses three basic questions regarding the development of word-internal prosodic structure: How much of the phonological structure of early words is regulated by the same constituents and principles that govern the organization of prosodic structure of mature grammar? Why do early words diverge from the adult targets in shape and size? And what is the best way to model developmental changes that occur in prosodic structure? Answers to these questions are explored through the longitudinal analysis of spontaneous production data from child Japanese. The analysis provides new types of evidence and new arguments that the prosodic phonology of young children is largely continuous with that of adults, and that the surface child-adult divergence in word forms and the overall pattern of developmental changes are best explained in terms of ranked violable constraints on the representation of prosodic structure, whose ordering is modified in the course of acquisition.
Book Synopsis Proceedings of the 4th World Congress of African Linguistics, New Brunswick 2003 by : Akinbiyi Akinlabi
Download or read book Proceedings of the 4th World Congress of African Linguistics, New Brunswick 2003 written by Akinbiyi Akinlabi and published by . This book was released on 2004 with total page 716 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Ben Elugbe u. Tayo Bankale: Cognation Percentages in Benue-Congo-Implications for Internal Classification / Larry Hyman: Why Describe African Languages? / H. Ekkehard Wolff: Segments and Prosodies in Chadic-On Descriptive and Explanatory Adequacy, Historical Reconstructions, and the Status of Lamang-Hdi / Oluseye Adesola: Coda Deletion in the Yoruba Loan Phonology / Akinbiyi Akinlabi u. Alexander Iwara: Transparency and Opacity in Lokaa Vowel Harmony / Michael Cahill: Marked Tones and Texture-The Necessity of High Tones in K°Anni / Bruce Connell: Pitch Realization of Questions and Statements in Mambila / Yoshihito Dobashi: Phonological Phrasing in Sandawe / Laura J. Downing: Constraint and Complexity in Subsegmental Representations / Alexander Iwara: The Grammatical Function of Tone on Lokaa / Rose O. Aziza: Negation in Southwestern Edoid-The Case of Urhobo / Christa Beaudoin-Lietz, Derek Nurse u. Sarah Rose: Pronominal Object Marking in Bantu / Stefan Elders: Distributed Predicative Syntax in Doyayo-Constituent Order Alternations and Cliticization / Zygmunt Fraijzyngier u. Mohammed Munkaila: Point of View of the Subject as a Grammatical Category / Jason Kandybowicz: Predicate Clefts, Derivations, and Universal Grammar / Roland Kiessling: "The giraffes burst throw emerge climb pass through the roof of the hut"-Verbal Serialisation in the West Ring Languages (Isu, Weh, Aghem) / Zelealem Leyew: The Cardinal Numerals of Nilo-Saharan Languages / Michael R. Marlo: Prefixal Reduplication in Lusaamia-Evidence from Morphology / Philip W. Rudd: "Haya, Basi" "Okay so" Markers of Management and Interaction in Swahili Conversation / Josephat M. Rugemalira: Locative Arguments in Bantu / Ken Safir: On Person as a Model for Logophoricity / Ronald P. Schaefer u. Francis O. Egbokhare: Emai Contact Constructions: Beyond Verbs in Series / Helga Schröder: The Relevance of Verbal Morphology in Toposa Discourse / Anne Storch: Traces of a Secret Language-Circumfixes in Hone (Jukun) Plurals / Weldu Michael Weldyesus: Locative Predication in Tigrinya / Tunde Adegbola: Probabilistically Speaking: A Quantitative Exploration of Yorùbá Speech Surrogacy / Rachélle Gauton, Gilles-Maurice de Schryver u. Linkie Mohlala: A Corpus-based Investigation of the Zulu Nominal Suffix -kazi - A Preliminary Study / Wanjiku Nganga: Automatic Word Sense Disambiguation-Kiswahili Nouns / Koen Bostoen: The Vocabulary of Pottery Fashioning Techniques in Great Lakes Bantu-A Comparative Onomasiological Study / Chinyere Ohiri-Aniche: Reconstruction of Initial Velar and Labial-Velar Consonants at the Pre-Lower Cross-Igboid-Yoruboid-Edoid Stage of Benue-Congo / Henry Tourneux: Évolution Morphologique et syntaxique du parler des jeunes "Kotoko" de Goulfe (Cameroun) / Kay Williamson: Implosives in Mande-Atlantic-Congo / Bertrade B. Ngo-Ngijol Banoum: Bantu Gender Revisited through an Analysis of Basaá Categories-A Typological Perspective / Herman M. Batibo: The Role of the External Setting in Language Shift Process-The Case of the Nama-Speaking Ovaherero in Tshabong / Paul D. Fallon: The Best is Not Good Enough-Scouring a Previously Documented Language for More / Aurélia Ferrari: Le sheng: Expansion et Vernacularisation d'une Variété Urbaine Hybride à Nairobi / Helene Fatima Idris: The Status and Use of African Languages versus Arabic in Sudan-A Sociolinguistic Survey in Nyala, Darfur / H.R.T. Muzale: Developing a Language in a Complex Situation: Prospects and Challenges of Tanzanian Sign Language / Francis O. Oyebade u. T.O. Agoyi: The Endangered Status of Marginalised Languages-Sosan and Ùkuè as Case Study / Solomon Oluwole Oyetade: Language Endangerment in Nigeria-Perspectives with the Akpes Cluster of Akoko Languages / Margarida Maria Taddoni Petter: Contact de Langues au Brésil-les Langues Africaines et le Portugais Brésilien / Eno-Abasi E. Urua: Language Marginalization-the Lower Cross Experience
Book Synopsis The School of Oriental and African Studies by : Ian Brown
Download or read book The School of Oriental and African Studies written by Ian Brown and published by Cambridge University Press. This book was released on 2016-07-21 with total page 347 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A history of the School of Oriental and African Studies in London from its foundation in 1916.
Book Synopsis Pidgins and Creoles by : Jacques Arends
Download or read book Pidgins and Creoles written by Jacques Arends and published by John Benjamins Publishing. This book was released on 1994-12-20 with total page 429 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This introduction to the linguistic study of pidgin and creole languages is clearly designed as an introductory course book. It does not demand a high level of previous linguistic knowledge. Part I: General Aspects and Part II: Theories of Genesis constitute the core for presentation and discussion in the classroom, while Part III: Sketches of Individual Languages (such as Eskimo Pidgin, Haitian, Saramaccan, Shaba Swahili, Fa d'Ambu, Papiamentu, Sranan, Berbice Dutch) and Part IV: Grammatical Features (such as TMA particles and auxiliaries, noun phrases, reflexives, serial verbs, fronting) can form the basis for further exploration. A concluding chapter draws together the different strands of argumentation, and the annotated list provides the background information on several hundred pidgins, creoles and mixed languages. Diversity rather than unity is taken to be the central theme, and for the first time in an introduction to pidgins and creoles, the Atlantic creoles receive the attention they deserve. Pidgins are not treated as necessarily an intermediate step on the way to creoles, but as linguistic entities in their own right with their own characteristics. In addition to pidgins, mixed languages are treated in a separate chapter. Research on pidgin and creole languages during the past decade has yielded an abundance of uncovered material and new insights. This introduction, written jointly by the creolists of the University of Amsterdam, could not have been written without recourse to this new material.
Book Synopsis Encyclopedia of Spirits and Ghosts in World Mythology by : Theresa Bane
Download or read book Encyclopedia of Spirits and Ghosts in World Mythology written by Theresa Bane and published by McFarland. This book was released on 2016-03-24 with total page 179 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Of all the anomalous phenomenon reported, ghost sightings are by far the most common. The words "ghost" and "spirit" are used interchangeably in American English but in other cultures the lingering souls of the departed are not to be confused with ancestral spirits, demonic spirits, numens or poltergeists. This encyclopedia lists hundreds of entities of the spirit realm--from aatxe to zuzeca--from world mythology and folklore.