Search
Skip to Search Results- 13Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 13Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of/Theses and Dissertations
- 7Linguistics, Department of
- 6Toolkit for Grant Success
- 6Toolkit for Grant Success/Successful Grants (Toolkit for Grant Success)
- 3Linguistics, Department of/Research Publications (Linguistics)
- 3Department of Modern Languages and Cultural Studies
- 3Department of Secondary Education
- 2Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders
- 2Department of English and Film Studies
- 1Department of Educational Psychology
- 1Department of Elementary Education
- 1Andrea MacLeod (Department of Communication Sciences & Disorders, Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine)
- 1Anne Malena (Modern Languages and Cultural Studies)
- 1George K. Georgiou (Educational Psychology)
- 1Johnston, Ingrid (Secondary Education)
- 1MacLaren, Ian (English)
- 1MacLeod, Andrea (Communication Sciences and Disorders)
-
2023-05-16
Learners of English may be influenced by the sounds of their mother tongue when speaking English. This study analyzes the acoustic features of English fricatives, such as the s sound in 'hiss', produced by native Mandarin speakers and native English speakers. This study also investigated how...
-
Travel Compilations in Sixteenth-Century England: Eden and Ramusio as Hakluyt's Generic Precursors
DownloadSpring 2012
Scholarship on Richard Hakluyt’s compilations of travel writing regularly refers to his main literary predecessors: Richard Eden and Giovanni Battista Ramusio. However, such scholarship very rarely engages in a sustained comparison of Hakluyt’s, Eden’s, and Ramusio’s work. In George Bruner Parks’...
-
Upper Necaxa Totonac in Context: Exploring the Past, Present, and Future of Northern Totonac
Download2011-11-28
SSHRC Awarded IG 2012: The objective of this research is the continued documentation of Upper Necaxa Totonac (UNT), an endangered Totonacan language of the Sierra Madre Oriental in Puebla State, Mexico, and the expansion of this project to selected sister languages in the Northern Totonac area....
-
When is a preposition a linking element?ilingual children's acquisition of French compound nouns
Download2001-01-01
French is traditionally considered a non-compounding language because Speakers prefer to use lexical forms such äs NPN instead of N-N compounds. However, the preposition in these French NPNs shares similarities with meaningless linking elements in compounds in other languages. It is therefore...