Showing 81 - 100 results of 193 for search '"uttering"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
  1. 81

    Gestural Ways of Depicting Metaphors and Abstract Concepts by Kraśnicka Izabela

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…The aim of the article is to present ways in which gestures combine with the verbal layer of an utterance, thus reflecting embodied thinking and the rooting of abstract concepts in human bodily experience. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  2. 82

    Propositions relatives et niveau phrastique by Gérard Melis

    Published 1999-12-01
    “…Its main purpose is to underline the fact that such clauses have a role to play not only at the level of the NP but also - and mainly- at the level of the complete utterance, involving referential, textual and subjective parameters.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  3. 83

    Creativity in children’s speech development: a case study of Persian speaking children by Samad Mirza Suzani

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…The data consisted of utterances by a number of children at an age range of 1;10 to 4;10 since it is considered a productive period for the creation of new words. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  4. 84

    Why do we need indexicals in communication? by O. A. Kozyreva

    Published 2023-02-01
    “…The reason for that is using indexicals instead of descriptions reduces the accuracy of information communicated in utterances. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  5. 85

    Justice et agentivité distribuée chez les Mixe de Oaxaca (Mexique) by Perig Pitrou

    Published 2013-12-01
    “…Through the study of various types of ritual speech uttered by judicial authorities during their service in a Mixe Indian village community, the aim of this article is to understand how the different kinds of agency attributed to non-human agents combine with human agency within a hierarchical judicial institution. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  6. 86

    Le rôle des prépositions : le cas de FOR by Philippe Rapatel

    Published 2010-12-01
    “…We will see to what extent the function of FOR can be applied to all the utterances where it appears as a preposition.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  7. 87

    An Image Sharing Encryption Management System For Kabale University. by Bemera, Rauben

    Published 2024
    “…Information security has been the most common word uttered by any man any device or any peripheral for the past two centuries. …”
    Get full text
    Thesis
  8. 88

    Intertextuality in media discourse: A reader’s perspective by Velykoroda Yuriy, Moroz Oksana

    Published 2021-10-01
    “…Based on the results of the survey, conclusions are drawn to address the following research questions – whether respondents can recognize intertextual references as such in the context, whether they can interpret an utterance despite failing to detect intertextual segments, and whether there exists a correspondence between recognizability of an intertextual reference and attempts at defining and/or replacing it. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  9. 89

    Vers une définition des constructions « tough » en anglais : les adjectifs et leur complément infinitif by Joasha Boutault

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…Through the use of several syntactic tests and the study of genuine utterances in context, we propose a classification of « tough » constructions based on their semantico-syntactic properties. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  10. 90

    Vorschlag als Sprachhandlungsmuster: Methodologie der kontrastiven Analyse am Beispiel des deutsch-polnischen Sprachvergleichs by Elizaveta Kotorova, Tadeusz Zuchewicz

    Published 2018-01-01
    “…Particular attention is given to the central and peripheral forms of implementation as well as to the similarities and differences in the formulation of utterances expressing PROPOSAL in German and Polish. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  11. 91

    Anaphore et fonction attribut du sujet : le cas de SO by Elisabet Johansson-Manoury

    Published 2012-11-01
    “…This article deals with a particular kind of subject complement, and in so doing discusses the notions of “defining feature” and “subjective feature” in utterances where the adverb SO acts as an anaphora for the subject complement. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  12. 92

    Généalogie générique du monologue dramatiquebrowningnien ; et du monopolylogue by Yann Tholoniat

    Published 2011-03-01
    “…If Tennyson called Maud a monodrama, Browning’s most original generic achievement might be called a “monopolylogue”, that is to say a speech containing various voices uttered by only one speaker.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  13. 93

    Pouvoirs en conflit dans le personnage de Jane Shore dans The First and Second Parts of King Edward IV de Thomas Heywood by Frédérique Fouassier

    Published 2010-09-01
    “…But there is no possibility for a Calvinist Mary-Magdalene, and Jane dies in utter destitution, stressing her didactic value to women in the audience.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  14. 94

    VIOLETA DINESCU UND DER SCHLÜSSEL DER TRÄUME. JUBILÄUMS-PORTRÄT by Bianca ŢIPLEA TEMEŞ

    Published 2013-12-01
    “… Fusing together in her artistic background two utterly contrasting worlds such as Romania and Germany, the composer Violeta Dinescu succeded to achieve a unique, distinctive voice in contemporary composition. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  15. 95

    Communicative competence in Medical Psycology Students: A proposal of indicators. by Ana María Molina Gómez, Ana Cristina Cuéllar Marrero, Belkys González Aguiar

    Published 2009-11-01
    “…In this paper, there is a proposal of communicative competence indicators to be trained in Medical Psychology students, defined from dimensions and indicators proposed in the cognitive, communicative and socio-cultural approach, which reveals the importance of the syntactic dimension of discourse in an indissoluble relation to the semantic and pragmatic dimensions, according to the comprehension and construction of utterances and therefore in the development of communicative competence.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  16. 96

    A quoi sert la modalisation a posteriori ? by Grégory Furmaniak

    Published 2015-07-01
    “…After commenting on the link between modality and illocutionary force, we provide a classification of the different instances of a posteriori modalisation according to their illocutionary forces; the assumption being that this kind of modalisation affects the illocutionary force of the utterance. We then re-assess the concept from a theoretical perspective in the light of the data, which leads us to make minor adjustments to its definition, both extensionally and intensionally.…”
    Get full text
    Article
  17. 97

    Untangling Historical Injustice and Historical Ill by Michael Schefczyk

    Published 2009-01-01
    “…I advocate an approach which assesses moral competence on the basis of an exposedness criterion, that is: a historical agent must not be blamed for failing to see the right moral reasons if his epoch and social world is utterly unacquainted with these reasons. However, an appropriate application of the exposedness criterion should take social factors and psychological mechanisms into account that obstruct access to the right reasons. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  18. 98

    Les emplois corrélatifs de parfois, quelquefois et des fois by Anne-Marie Guiraud

    Published 2017-10-01
    “…We will draw on a corpus from the 16th through the 20th century from the FRANTEXT online library, including utterances which we expect will meet our criteria and we will discuss the semantic and syntactical characteristics of these forms in correlative uses. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  19. 99

    Dislocation clitique de l’objet à gauche en français écrit by Étienne Riou, Barbara Hemforth

    Published 2015-09-01
    “…Relevant factors include pragmatic, stylistic, and syntactic constraints which will influence the acceptability of an utterance. We therefore argue that, by modifying the information structure, it is possible to make a construction that is strongly associated with spoken French (clitic left dislocation of the object) acceptable in a written French context. …”
    Get full text
    Article
  20. 100

    « A thrust at truth and a lie » : The Crying of Lot 49 ou le langage en quête de vérité by Jean-Yves Pellegrin

    Published 2004-12-01
    “…Yet, while the detective novel tends to identify this power with the narrative performance itself, Lot 49 insists on the utter inability of narratives to work out a puzzle and find out the truth. …”
    Get full text
    Article