Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Journal of Language Contact is a peer-reviewed academic journal [1] published in English and French. It covers research on language contact, use, and change. This includes linguistic, anthropological, historical, and cognitive factors. [2] The journal was established in 2007.
Applied Linguistics; Bilingualism: Language and Cognition; Language Learning; Language Testing; Journal of Second Language Writing; LEARN Journal; System; TESOL Quarterly; The Modern Language Journal; Colombian Applied Linguistics Journal
These journals publish articles in the four fields of anthropology: archaeology, biological, cultural, and linguistic. American Anthropologist: premier journal of the American Anthropological Association, incorporating all four fields; Annual Review of Anthropology: published by Annual Reviews; releases an annual volume of review articles
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Journal of Language Contact; ... This page was last edited on 5 July 2022, ...
The influence can go deeper, extending to the exchange of even basic characteristics of a language such as morphology and grammar.. Newar, for example, spoken in Nepal, is a Sino-Tibetan language distantly related to Chinese but has had so many centuries of contact with neighbouring Indo-Iranian languages that it has even developed noun inflection, a trait that is typical of the Indo-European ...
Interactional sociolinguistics is a subdiscipline of linguistics that uses discourse analysis to study how language users create meaning via social interaction. [1] It is one of the ways in which linguists look at the intersections of human language and human society; other subfields that take this perspective are language planning, minority language studies, quantitative sociolinguistics, and ...
As a researcher, lecturer and author he has been active in the fields of English and general linguistics, contrastive and applied linguistics, sociolinguistics, language policy and planning, language in relation to identity, culture, ethnicity and nationalism, language attitudes, written language and literacy, terminology and bibliography, translation theory, history of linguistics, the status ...
Deborah Cameron (born 10 November 1958) [1] is a British linguist and feminist who currently holds the Rupert Murdoch Professorship in Language and Communication at Worcester College, Oxford University.