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  2. Displacement (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Displacement_(linguistics)

    In addition, displacement in the waggle dance is restricted by the language's lack of creativity and productivity. The bees can express direction and distance, but it has been experimentally determined that they lack a sign for "above". It is also doubtful that bees can communicate about non-existent nectar for the purpose of deception. [3]

  3. Hockett's design features - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hockett's_design_features

    While primate communication utilizes the first 9 features, the final 4 features (displacement, productivity, cultural transmission, and duality) are reserved for humans. [ citation needed ] Hockett later added prevarication, reflexiveness , and learnability to the list as uniquely human characteristics.

  4. Charles F. Hockett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_F._Hockett

    Charles Francis Hockett (January 17, 1916 – November 3, 2000) was an American linguist who developed many influential ideas in American structuralist linguistics. He represents the post-Bloomfieldian phase of structuralism often referred to as "distributionalism" or "taxonomic structuralism".

  5. Migration studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Migration_studies

    Migration studies is an interdisciplinary field which draws on anthropology ... this reflects displacement and refugee movements which have resulted from conflicts ...

  6. Mobilities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobilities

    Mobilities is a contemporary paradigm in the social sciences that explores the movement of people (human migration, individual mobility, travel, transport), ideas (see e.g. meme) and things (transport), as well as the broader social implications of those movements.

  7. Anthropological linguistics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthropological_linguistics

    Anthropological linguistics is the subfield of linguistics and anthropology which deals with the place of language in its wider social and cultural context, and its role in making and maintaining cultural practices and societal structures. [1]

  8. Population transfer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Population_transfer

    Population exchange is the transfer of two populations in opposite directions at about the same time. In theory at least, the exchange is non-forcible, but the reality of the effects of these exchanges has always been unequal, and at least one half of the so-called "exchange" has usually been forced by the stronger or richer participant.

  9. Ethnogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnogenesis

    The term ethnogenesis was originally a mid-19th-century neologism [3] that was later introduced into 20th-century academic anthropology. In that context, it refers to the observable phenomenon of the emergence of new social groups that are identified as having a cohesive identity, i.e. an "ethnic group" in anthropological terms.