Browsing by DDC-Classification "ddc:420"
Now showing items 1-10 of 10
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Analyzing the inclusion of nature in an oil palm plantation: a landscape ecological case study in Mapiripán, Meta, Colombia
(2021)Oil palm plantations are known for their adverse effects on biodiversity and human well-being. Such industrial agricultural landscapes are homogeneous and oversimplify biodiversity and convey little or no human well-being. ... -
Appendix: Training Multilingual Writing Strategies in Higher Education
(2022)Surveys and teaching material for "Training Multilingual Writing Strategies in Higher Education - Multilingual Approaches to Writing-to-learn in Discipline-specific Courses", published with Peter Lang Group AG (https://w ... -
English Prosody of Advanced Learners: A Contrastive Interlanguage Analysis
(2021)The present study investigated the production of prosody of 135 learners of English with the aim of identifying the acoustic properties of f0 in advanced Czech, German, and Spanish Learner English (n=45 each). Their ... -
Der Grendelkampf des Beowulf
(1961) -
Studien und Stipendien in Britannien
(1969) -
The Linguistics of Gratitude and Courtesy in Indian and Sri Lankan English
(2021)This corpus-based Master Thesis explores linguistic politeness and gratitude in Indian and Sri Lankan English. First, the theory section displays the historical development of the Indian and Sri Lankan English varieties, ... -
The vocalization of semivowels in medieval English : a quantitative study
(2017)In a number of positions the Old English semivowels [j] and [w] (as in dæg , flowan ) began losing articulatory strength and were eventually vocalized to [i] and [u], respectively, joining the preceding vowels (cf. the ... -
"Whereof one cannot speak...": Deceptive voices and agentive silences in the articulation of identities of the Moluccan postcolonial migrant community in the Netherlands
(2020)In theoretical and activist discourses concerning power and identity, “voice” is often used as a metaphor for empowerment (“we must raise our voices”), whereas silence is often used as voice’s negative counterpart, signifying ...