Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tran-Duc-Thao and the Language of the Real Life." Language Sciences 70:45-57 [Special Issue: Karl Marx and the Language Sciences: critical encounters ed. by Peter E Jones]. Amsterdam: Elsevier 2018. D'Alonzo, Jacopo. "Tran-Duc-Thao: Consciousness & Language. Report of the Centenary Conference." Acta Structuralica - International Journal for ...
Thao (/ θ aʊ / thow; Thao: Thau a lalawa), also known as Sao, [2] is the nearly extinct language of the Thao people, [3] an indigenous people of Taiwan from the Sun Moon Lake region in central Taiwan. It is a Formosan language of the Austronesian family; [4] Barawbaw and Shtafari are dialects. [citation needed]
Từ điển bách khoa Việt Nam (lit: Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Vietnam) is a state-sponsored Vietnamese-language encyclopedia that was first published in 1995. It has four volumes consisting of 40,000 entries, the final of which was published in 2005. [1] The encyclopedia was republished in 2011.
Before Rhodes's work, traditional Vietnamese dictionaries showed the correspondences between Chinese characters and Vietnamese chữ Nôm script. [1] From the 17th century, Western missionaries started to devise a romanization system that represented the Vietnamese language to facilitate the propagation of the Christian faith, which culminated in the Dictionarium Annamiticum Lusitanum et ...
Vietnamese (tiếng Việt) is an Austroasiatic language spoken primarily in Vietnam where it is the official language. It belongs to the Vietic subgroup of the Austroasiatic language family. [5] Vietnamese is spoken natively by around 85 million people, [1] several times as many as the rest of the Austroasiatic family combined. [6]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Below are the primetime rankers for broadcast, cable and premium cable networks in 2024, among total viewers (as well as the top 50 list in adults 18-49).
In Vietnamese, encyclopedia are known as Bách khoa toàn thư, literally meaning "complete book of a hundred subjects". The first work which was considered as an encyclopedia of Vietnam is an 18th-century book Vân đài loại ngữ by Lê Quý Đôn , a Lê dynasty Confucian scholar.