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         Linguistics:     more books (100)
  1. Sign Language and Linguistic Universals by Wendy Sandler, Diane Lillo-Martin, 2006-02-06
  2. Concise Introduction to Linguistics, A (2nd Edition) by Bruce M. Rowe, Diane P. Levine, 2008-03-01
  3. Longman Dictionary of Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics by Jack C. Richards, Richard W. Schmidt, 2010-07-01
  4. Case Study Research in Applied Linguistics (Second Language Acquisition Research Series) by Patricia Duff, 2007-10-04
  5. Continuum Companion to Research Methods in Applied Linguistics (Continuum Companions) by Brian Paltridge, Aek Phakiti, 2010-04-04
  6. Indo-European Linguistics: An Introduction (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics) by James Clackson, 2007-11-26
  7. Linguistics for Everyone: An Introduction by Kristin Denham, Anne Lobeck, 2009-03-06
  8. Linguistic Key to the Greek New Testament by Fritz Rienecker, Cleon L. Rogers, 1982-04
  9. Global Linguistic Flows: Hip Hop Cultures, Youth Identities, and the Politics of Language by H. Samy Alim, Awad Ibrahim, et all 2008-09-04
  10. Word Myths: Debunking Linguistic Urban Legends by David Wilton, 2008-11-06
  11. The Handbook of Computational Linguistics and Natural Language Processing (Blackwell Handbooks in Linguistics)
  12. In the Land of Invented Languages: Adventures in Linguistic Creativity, Madness, and Genius by Arika Okrent, 2010-05-11
  13. Linguistics & Biblical Interpretation by Peter Cotterell, Max Turner, 1989-01-27
  14. Critical Applied Linguistics: A Critical Introduction by Alastair Pennycook, 2001-01-01

61. Reminiscences By Pike On Early American Anthropological Linguistics
Essay written by Kenneth Pike for the journal American Anthropologist. Contains reminiscences of many leading figures of this field in the early 20th century, such as Edward Sapir.
http://www.sil.org/silewp/2001/001/SILEWP2001-001.html
SIL Electronic Working Papers 2001-001, May 2001
Reminiscences by Pike on Early American Anthropological Linguistics
By Kenneth L. Pike
SIL International
COMMENT FROM THE EDITOR OF SILEWP
This is the last academic paper that Ken Pike wrote shortly before his death on December 31, 2000 at age 88. In October 1999 the editor of American Anthropologist AA
Contents
Abstract [by the Editor of SILEWP]
In this essay, Pike reviews where, in his view, linguistic anthropology was in the past, where it is now, and where it may lead in the future. He describes how he got into linguistics in the 1930s, and then reminisces about his personal interactions with the godfathers of American structural linguistics: Bloomfield, Sapir, Fries, Bloch, Hockett, Nida, Swadesh, Trager, Voegelin, and others. He describes how his theory of tagmemics evolved, as well as his emic/etic concept; and he tells of the abrupt changes that came in American linguistics with the rise of Chomsky and transformational linguistics.
Early Mentors
Mayan Studies I Phonetics Morphology In the spring of 1937, using a cane to start with, I walked for a month from the highlands of the Mixtec area (8,300 feet above sea level) to the coast, to survey other Mixtec-related linguistic needs on the way.

62. Centre Of Corpus Linguistics
Centre for Corpus linguistics, Corpus linguistics shows how meaning is createdand how it can be changed by members of the discourse community.
http://www.english.bham.ac.uk/ccl/

CENTRE FOR CORPUS LINGUISTICS

Language is not a mirror of reality, nor is it a mere reflection of some universal 'mentalese' or 'language of thought'. Meaning is socially constructed in the discourse, in texts that shape and reshape continually the complex interactions among people and the institutions they establish. It is in texts that the members of a discourse community negotiate the meaning of what they say. Meaning isn't stable. Every new contribution to the discourse can bring about change. The Centre for Corpus Linguistics investigates meaning as a social phenomenon.
The Centre for Corpus Linguistics takes the Birmingham corpus research tradition commenced by John Sinclair and his pioneering COBUILD project into the 21 st century. Corpus linguistics shows how meaning is created and how it can be changed by members of the discourse community. Thus, it empowers people to play an active role in the globalised multilingual discourse that determines the social reality of today. Our Agenda (full text) Do you want to know more about Corpus Linguistics? Have a look at the

63. CSLI Center For The Study Of Information And Technology -- Stanford University
Home page for the CSLI at Stanford University. The institute is a multidisciplinary body spanning linguistics, philosophy, computer science and mathematics.
http://www-csli.stanford.edu/csli/index.shtml
The Center for the Study of Language and Information (CSLI) is an Independent Research Center founded in 1983 by researchers from Stanford University SRI International , and Xerox PARC (now just PARC). CSLI is devoted to research in the emerging science of information, computing, and cognition. This new science had its origins in the late 1970s as computer scientists, linguists, logicians, philosophers, psychologists, and artificial intelligence researchers, seeking solutions to problems in their own disciplines, turned to one another for help.
Featured Research Group
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy implements the new digital library concept of a "dynamic reference work"-it is a highly customized work-flow system by which the members of an entire discipline can collaboratively maintain a refereed reference work that not only introduces (for beginners) traditional philosophical topics but also tracks (for experts) the new ideas being published on those topics in both fixed and web-based media.
Featured Publication
The Philosophical Status of Diagrams by Mark Greaves explores the reasons why structured graphics have been largely excluded from contemporary formal theories of axiomatic systems. In particular, it traces how several systematic forces in the intellectual history of mathematics and logic drove the adoption of sentential representational styles rather than diagrammatic ones. This book shows the progressive effects of these forces on the evolution of diagram-based systems of inference in logic and geometry, stretching from the Greeks to the early twentieth-century work of David Hilbert. This exploration makes clear that the familiar prejudice against diagrammatic inference in logic and geometry owes more to history and philosophical context than to any technical incompatibility with modern theories of axiomatic systems.

64. Linguistics At The University Of Edinburgh
Theoretical and Applied linguistics The University of Edinburgh AdamFerguson Building 40 George Square Edinburgh EH8 9LL contact us.
http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/
TEXT
VERSION ABOUT US
people

contact us

facilities+resources
... SEARCH HOST SITE FOR
THE LINGUIST LIST

Theoretical and Applied Linguistics
The University of Edinburgh
Adam Ferguson Building
40 George Square
Edinburgh contact us For over fifty years the University of Edinburgh has been home to world-renowned departments and institutes involved in the study of language and speech. TAAL includes the INSTITUTE for APPLIED LANGUAGE STUDIES the CENTRE for SPEECH TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH the and RESEARCH GROUPS We are able to offer excellent laboratory and computational facilities, a congenial social and intellectual atmosphere, and access to the whole community of linguists, phoneticians, and cognitive scientists for which Edinburgh is famous. LINGUISTICS as an outside subject
European Second Language Association 13th Annual International Conference http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/index.shtml updated 26 March 2003

65. Alan W. Biermann
Duke University. Chair, Department of Computer Science. AAAI Fellow. Computational linguistics, automatic programming and inference, Author of Great Ideas in Computer Science.
http://www.cs.duke.edu/~awb
Next: EDUCATION
Alan W. Biermann
Professor of Computer Science
Levine Science Research Center, D213
Box 90129,
Department of Computer Science

Duke University

Durham, North Carolina
(919) 660-6539 [voice]
(919) 660-6519 [fax]
awb@cs.duke.edu

66. Berkeley Linguistics Home Page
office) linginfo@uclink.berkeley.edu linguistics at UC Berkeleyhas a rich and distinguished tradition. From 1901 to 1906, the Category Reference Education Berkeley Departments
http://www.linguistics.berkeley.edu/
Department address:
1203 Dwinelle Hall,
University of California at Berkeley
Berkeley, CA 94720-2650
Phone : general info: (510) 642-2757 grad info: (510) 643-7224
Fax
E-mail (dept. office): linginfo@uclink.berkeley.edu
Linguistics at U.C. Berkeley has a rich and distinguished tradition. From 1901 to 1906, the first Linguistics program operated under the direction of the classical philologist Benjamin Ide Wheeler, who was also President of the University of California. After that time most linguistic work at U.C. Berkeley was done through the Anthropology Department where, under the direction of the noted anthropological linguist Alfred Kroeber, extensive efforts were devoted to the recording and describing of unwritten languages, especially American Indian languages spoken in California and elsewhere in the United States.
The current Department of Linguistics continues these traditions alongside other areas of expertise that have developed since. Constituted in 1953 by the distinguished Sanskrit and Dravidian scholar Murray Emeneau, and subsequently chaired by Mary Haas, a leading scholar of both American Indian and Asian languages, there are at present 15 faculty and 6 retired professors associated with the department. With the approximately 50 graduate students in progress toward the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees, Berkeley linguists remain committed to the empirical, historical, and theoretical study of linguistic structure within a broad linguistic, cultural, and cognitive context.

67. A Bit Of Something
Associate Professor in the Department of linguistics, University of Delhi.
http://www.homepages.ucl.ac.uk/~uclyara/home.htm
Linguistics Page
(Downloadable) Linguistics Papers

68. UK Slavonic Linguists
A clearinghouse for information about academics working in the field of Slavonic linguistics in the UK.
http://www.shef.ac.uk/russian/Slavonic-linguists.html
Slavonic Linguists in the United Kingdom
This page is a clearinghouse for information about academics working in the field of Slavonic linguistics in the UK. If you are an academic or private scholar and wish to be included on this page, send us your details . We will include entries from both academics and private researchers who publish in the fields of theoretical linguistics, applied linguistics and philology as they relate to the Slavonic languages.
UK and European organisations of interest
Slavonic linguists in the UK
Dr Neil Bermel
Lecturer in Czech Language and Linguistics
Department of Russian and Slavonic Studies

University of Sheffield
Czech and Russian language and linguistics, language culture and sociolinguistics, language teaching, translation studies
e-mail: n.bermel@shef.ac.uk

69. Linguistics: An Introduction To Linguistics
linguistics Get your own Free Home Page. Page last updated April 5, 1997. linguistics.What is linguistics. linguistics is the scientific study of language.
http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/3920/
Linguistics Links Tools Contact me Support free speech online! Visitors since April 1997 Sign my Guestbook! Sign Guestbook View Guestbook This page hosted by Get your own
Free Home Page
Page last updated:
April 5, 1997
Linguistics
What is Linguistics
Linguistics is the scientific study of language. It endeavours to answer the questionwhat is language and how is represented in the mind? Linguists focus on describing and explaining language and are not concerned with the prescriptive rules of the language (ie., do not split infinitives). Linguists are not required to know many languages and linguists are not interpreters. The underlying goal of the linguist is to try to discover the universals concerning language. That is, what are the common elements of all languages. The linguist then tries to place these elements in a theoretical framework that will describe all languages and also predict what can not occur in a language. Linguistics is a social science that shares common ground with other social sciences such as psychology, anthropology, sociology and archaeology. It also may influence other disciplines such as english, communication studies and computer science. Linguistics for the most part though can be considered a cognitive science. Along with psychology, philosophy and computer science (AI), linguistics is ultimately concerned with how the human brain functions.

70. Conference Site
Information and call for papers in Interactional linguistics, Ethnomethodology, Membership categorisation analysis (MCA), Applied Conversation Analysis (CA).
http://www.conversation-analysis.net/conf2002/
ANNOUNCEMENT
International Conference on Conversation Analysis (ICCA-02)
Copenhagen, Denmark
17-21 May, 2002
Call for papers
Programme

Info to presenters

Submissions
...
Links
[No frames page]

71. Resources In Applied Linguistics
Resources in Applied linguistics. Virtual Libraries. Applied linguisticsVirtual Library; linguistics Virtual Library at the Linguist List.
http://www.surrey.ac.uk/ELI/external.html

72. Texas A&M University Department Of English
Course offerings, graduate and undergraduate programs, faculty, staff, linguistics, writing programs and related links.
http://www-english.tamu.edu/
Search (CHOOSE SEARCH LOCATION) Undergraduate Studies Office Graduate Studies Office Writing Programs Office Departmental Newsletter (Weekly) Columns Newsletter (Annual) Personal Pages (Faculty, Staff, GATs) World Shakespeare Bibliography (WSB) for Other Searches: [ People Course Descriptions Upcoming Events SEARCH ENGINES
Modified: 2003/04/04:13:49:33
Department of English
Blocker 227
4227 TAMU
College Station, TX 77843-4227
PHONE (979) 845-3451
FAX (979) 862-2292
HOURS: Monday - Friday
Head of English Department:
Dr. J. Lawrence Mitchell
Local Date/Time:
Wednesday, April 09, 2003 06:31 am
Good morning!
Welcome to the Department of English at , part of the College of Liberal Arts . The English Department is located on the second floor of the Blocker Building
This site includes information about the course offerings and graduate programs within the department; the faculty, staff, and graduate students that instruct and keep things running; the various projects and associated groups within the department; and much more. If you have any problems or questions regarding this site or the pages located here, send email to the

73. Chinese Linguistics Page
The Chinese linguistics Page provides anyone, who is interested in this uniquelanguage with an unofficial place to exchange and disseminate linguistic
http://www.people.fas.harvard.edu/~whu/China/linguist.html

Discourse

Pragmatics

Sociolinguistics
Functional Grammar Semantics
Lexicon
Historical Linguistics Dialectology Formal Syntax Language Acquisition Sino-Tibetan The Chinese Linguistics Page provides anyone, who is interested in this unique language with an unofficial place to exchange and disseminate linguistic information via the WWW technology. You are welcome to make contributions to this Web site and to communicate with its maintainers by internet mail to: Wenze Hu and Hongyin Tao Writing System Reform Computational Linguistics Net Discussions ... E-mail Addresses

74. Linguistics Program

http://www.departments.bucknell.edu/linguistics/

inguistics is the scientific study of language, its general structure and universal principles, of how language changes over time, how it is acquired and is processed during speech. It is fundamental to the study of a second language whether undertaken at Bucknell or later on after graduation. It is also strengthens study in anthropology (sociolinguistics), biology (neurolinguistics), cognitive psychology (psycholinguistics), classics (historical linguistics), philosophy (semantics), and early childhood development (language acquisition). Most importantly, the study of language raises our esteem for the only species which masters this most complex cognitive system, the one which binds us all together, for we master it, unconsciously, before we can ride a bike.
T he study of language in the Linguistics Program addresses a broad range of fundamental issues pertaining to what it is to be human while providing a foundation for understanding English and learning other languages. As a major cognitive function designed to express all other functions, it is the fulcrum of the human mind. Its universal properties unites us as a single species while the differences among dialects and specific languages distinguish us as nations and cultures. Language is the basis of literature, and accompaniment of our music, while serving as the primary means of everyday self-expression.
L inguistic courses at Bucknell address the following universal questions of human nature:
  • Are humans the only species that can talk? Can chimpanzees and dolphins talk, too?
  • 75. University Of Texas Department Of Linguistics

    http://www.utexas.edu/depts/linguistics/
    Department of Linguistics
    The University of Texas at Austin
    Anthony C. Woodbury, Chair
    Fall 2003 - Course Descriptions
    ASL Undergraduate Courses
    Linguistics Undergraduate Courses

    Linguistics Graduate Courses

    UPCOMING EVENTS
    Upcoming Colloquia
    Texas Linguistics Society Conferences

    Symposium About Language and SocietyAustin (SALSA)
    ACADEMIC PROGRAMS COURSES
    Schedules: Fall Spring Summer
    The Course Web Site
    Course descriptions and Kearsy's links to Resources for Linguistics Students.
    Conference courses, Thesis and Dissertation
    PEOPLE ASL Faculty Linguistics Faculty Students Staff ... How to contact us PUBLICATIONS Texas Linguistic Forum LINKS FOR LINGUISTS College of Liberal Arts Home Page UT Austin Web Central Comments: bprice@mail.utexas.edu

    76. School Of Linguistics And Applied Language Studies, Reading, UK

    http://www.rdg.ac.uk/slals/
    School of Linguistics
    and
    Applied Language Studies Undergraduate courses Staff About the School Postgraduate courses ... English for Academic Study
    • Pre-sessional courses English Language and Study Skills
    Resources
    • Library CODISC Speech Research Laboratory Language Acquisition Laboratory
    Events
    • Conferences Seminars
    INSET Course for teachers of AS/A Level English Language
    7th - 11th July 2003 Language Testing
    English Pronunciation Research Unit
  • Research and consultancy
  • Page maintained by p.a.thompson@reading.ac.uk
    Last revised: April 2003

    77. Greek Language And Linguistics Gateway
    Links to resources, in print and on the Web, for classical and Biblical (koine) Greek linguistics.Category Science Social Sciences IndoEuropean Hellenic......Get information about linguistics and Ancient Greek. Find links to manuscriptson the web and bibliographic resources for Greek linguistics.
    http://www.greek-language.com/
    If you see advertisements displayed with this page, you can click here to remove them. The page will load faster, and there will be more room for what you really came to see. Note: The Greek Language and Linguistics Gateway does not support any of the ads you will see if you choose this link. The link is provided only to give you access to the statistical information that ICDirect provides regarding this site and many of others.

    78. MLA: Bibliography, Style Guides, Teaching Modern Languages, Teaching English, Te
    Provides a classified listing and subject index for books and articles published on modern languages, literatures, folklore, and linguistics.
    http://www.mla.org/
    The Modern Language Association of America is a not-for-profit membership organization that promotes the study and teaching of language and literature. The MLA publishes books and journals; arranges an annual convention; assists job seekers and hiring departments; develops MLA style; and sponsors committees that oversee association activities. See what's happening at MLA-sponsored sites:
    Member Comments on
    Delegate Assembly resolution:
    Click here.
    Click here to contact the offices of the MLA.

    79. UCLA Department Of Linguistics
    UCLA Department of linguistics. UCLA, Department of linguistics 3125Campbell Hall Box 951543 Los Angeles, CA 900951543 Telephone
    http://www.linguistics.ucla.edu/
    UCLA
    Department
    of
    Linguistics
    UCLA, Department of Linguistics
    3125 Campbell Hall
    Box 951543
    Los Angeles, CA 90095-1543
    Telephone: (310) 825-0634
    Fax: (310) 206-5743
    E-Mail: linguist@humnet.ucla.edu About the Department
    Undergraduate Program
    Graduate Program ... Search

    80. SNePS Research Group Home Page
    Describes the Semantic Network Processing System and its associated Research Group at SUNY Buffalo. Research in cognitive science, knowledge representation and reasoning, and computational linguistics.
    http://www.cse.Buffalo.EDU/sneps/
    UNIVERSITY AT BUFFALO - STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
    SNePS The Semantic Network Processing System

    The long-term goal of The SNePS Research Group is the design and construction of a natural-language-using computerized cognitive agent, and carrying out the research in artificial intelligence, computational linguistics, and cognitive science necessary for that endeavor. The three-part focus of the group is on knowledge representation, reasoning, and natural-language understanding and generation. The group is widely known for its development of the SNePS knowledge representation/reasoning system, and Cassie, its computerized cognitive agent.
    SNeRG LINKS Current Research Projects Personnel Bibliography SNeRG Meeting Schedule ... Some Relevant Conferences SNePS LINKS Instructions for Running SNePS SNePS FTP Site SNePS Manuals SNePS Tutorial PS version PDF version DVI version SNePS Demonstrations ... Screen Shot of the SNePS graphical interface, XGinseng, showing a possible SNePS representation of "Everything is either an animal, a vegetable, or a mineral, and John believes that Rover is an animal."

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