Academic literature on the topic 'Bardi language'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bardi language"

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Bowern, Claire, Joyce McDonough, and Katherine Kelliher. "Bardi." Journal of the International Phonetic Association 42, no. 3 (November 23, 2012): 333–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025100312000217.

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Bardi is the northernmost language of the Nyulnyulan family, a non-Pama-Nyungan family of the Western Kimberley region of northwestern Australia. Currently about five people speak the language fluently, but approximately 1,000 people identify as Bardi. The region was settled by Europeans in the 1880s and two missions were founded in Bardi country in the 1890s. Use of the language began declining in the 1930s. Many Bardi people were moved several times between 1940 and 1970, both to other missions dominated by speakers of other Indigenous languages and to local towns such as Derby. This community disruption accelerated the decline of language use in the community and first language acquisition. Bardi is the name of the language variety spoken at One Arm Point. There are two other named mutually intelligible varieties apart from Bardi: Baard and Jawi. The extent of dialect diversity within Bardi is unknown, but does not seem to have been particularly high compared to that between named varieties. The ISO-639 language code is [bcj].
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Neville, Maurice. "Developing an Orthography for Bardi: Some Problems." Aboriginal Child at School 19, no. 4 (September 1991): 33–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0310582200007562.

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If you work in a school which has an Aboriginal language program, you may have heard a new teacher make a comment similar to the one above. You may even remember making such a comment yourself! Teachers often become confused and frustrated when they try to use school resources, books and other teaching materials, only to find that the Aboriginal language has not always been written in the same way. The development of an orthography, a way of writing a language, is not a simple matter. Many, if not most, Aboriginal languages have been written in various ways over the years as linguists and others have revised the work of those before them. In this article I look at some of the problems encountered when developing an orthography for the Bardi language, in order to give teachers, and particularly new teachers, some understanding of the complications that can be involved. These include practical linguistic problems, as well as broader social issues that arise with such linguistic work.
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Simpson, Jane Helen. "Bardi Grubs and Frog Cakes: South Australian Words (review)." Language 82, no. 4 (2006): 952–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/lan.2006.0228.

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Lima, Zeuler, and Sandra Vivanco. "Culture translated and devoured: two Brazilian museums by Lina Bo Bardi." Journal of Romance Studies 2, no. 3 (December 2002): 45–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/jrs.2.3.45.

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schultz, daniel j. "Flesh made word: sacramental visibility in the Bardi Panel of Santa Croce, Florence." Word & Image 36, no. 4 (October 1, 2020): 357–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02666286.2020.1758897.

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Dos Santos Coutinho, Bárbara, and Ana Cristina Dos Santos Tostões. "The role of architecture in an engaging and meaningful experience of the physical exhibition." Sophia Journal 5, no. 1 (December 1, 2020): 36–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.24840/2183-8976_2019-0005_0001_04.

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While recognising the part that digital media play in bringing about greater accessibility to artworks display and ensuring that they are more visible, this paper argues that the physical exhibition continues to be the primary place for the public to encounter the arts, as it can offer an engaging and meaningful aesthetic experience through which people can transcend their own existence. As such, it is essential to rethink now, in the scope of an increasing digital world, the exhibition in conceptual and methodological terms. For this purpose, the exhibition space must be considered as content rather than container and the exhibition as a work, often with the intentionality of a “total work of art”, rather than just a vehicle for exhibiting artworks and objects. Having the former purpose in mind, this paper proposes a re-reading of the exhibition designs of Frederick Kiesler (1890–1965), Franco Albini (1905–1977) and Lina Bo Bardi (1914–1992) in order to evaluate how their theory and practice can provide useful lessons for our contemporary thinking. The three architects, assuming the role of curators, use only the specific language of an exhibition and remix conventional modes of communication and architectural vocabulary, exploring the natural and artificial light, materials, layouts, surfaces and geometries in innovative ways. They considered the exhibition to be a work of art, overcoming the container/content dichotomy and trigging an intersubjective and self-reflective participation. Kiesler, Albini and Bo Bardi may all be considered visionaries of our time, as they offer a landscape that stimulates our curiosity through a multiplicity of information arranged in a multisensory way, allowing each visitor to discover associations between himself and his surroundings. None of them simply created an opportunity for distraction or entertainment. This perspective is all the more pertinent nowadays, as the processes of digitalising information and virtualising the real may well lead to the dematerialization of the physical experience of art. By drawing upon these historical examples, this paper seeks to contribute to current study on how an exhibition can stimulate the cognitive, emotional and spiritual intelligence of each visitor and clarify the importance of this effect in 21st century museums and society at large.
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Matonis, Ann T. E. "Gutun Owain and his orbit: the Welsh bardic grammar and its cultural context in Northeast Wales." ZCPH 54, no. 1 (April 30, 2004): 154–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/zcph.2005.154.

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I began this study – as most studies are begun – with questions. What is the probable date of the composition of the bardic grammar? What were the circumstances of its composition? Was it originally intended as a manual of written instruction for bards whose instruction had been traditionally oral? How probable is it that a tract based on a Latin text would have been useful to Welsh bards? Why was it repeatedly copied by hand from the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries, long after the disintegration of the bardic orders? Might historical events or the threat to Welsh culture ensuant on such events explain – or help to explain – why it enjoyed the attentive support of the higher clergy, uchelwyr, and emergent gentry across divergent social origins and political and religious divides?
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Романюк, Людмила. "Interrelationships of Personal Values: A Moderated Mediation Analysis Based on Gender and Age." East European Journal of Psycholinguistics 4, no. 2 (December 28, 2017): 84–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.29038/eejpl.2017.4.2.rom.

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The present study describes ten personal values expressed by men and women from two countries, and it explores the relationships between two opposing values, Achievement and Benevolence, specifying Stimulation as a mediator between them. It is further explored whether such a mediation model could be further qualified by age and Gender as moderators. The 40-item Portraits Values Questionnaire (PVQ), measuring ten basic values, was administered to 1,000 young adults from two countries. Hierarchical regression methods were applied to examine mediation and moderation mechanisms.Minor gender and country differences emerged for some of the ten basic values. An indirect relationship among the three selected values was identified. Stimulation was found to operate as a mediator between achievement and benevolence. A conditional process model was established with Gender moderating the Achievement – Stimulation path (men had a steeper slope than women), whereas age moderated the Stimulation – Benevolence path (younger individuals had a steeper slope than older ones). Gender also moderated the Achievement – Benevolence path (men had a steeper slope than women). For men, the association between achievement and stimulation was stronger than for women. For the younger persons, the association between stimulation and benevolence was stronger than for older ones. For women, the level of benevolence was independent of their achievement level. The present analyses shed new light on indirect and differential associations among personal values, adding a novel perspective to research on cognitive mechanisms involved in the ten basic values’ becoming. References Bardi, A., & Schwartz, S.H. (2003). Values and behaviour: Strength and structure of relations. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 29(10), 1207–1220. Berlyne, D. Conflict, arousal and curiosity. New York: McGraw-Hill. 1960. Burgoyne, C.B. & Lea, S.E.G. (2006). Money is material. Science, 314(5802), 1091–1092. Hayes A. (2013). Introduction to mediation, moderation, and conditional process analysis: a regression-based approach. New York: Guilford Press. Kluckhohn, C. (1951). Values and value-orientations in the theory of action: An exploration in definition and classification. In: Toward a General Theory of Action, (pp. 388-433). T. Parsons & E. Shils (Eds.), Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Korman, A. (1974). The Psychology of Motivation. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. Maio, G. R., Hahn, U., Frost, J., & Cheung, W. (2009). Applying the value of equality unequally: Effects of value instantiations that vary in typicality. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 97(4), 598–614. Maio, G.R., Pakizeh, A., Cheung, W.Y. & Rees, K.J. (2009). Changing, priming, and acting on values: effects via motivational relations in a circular model. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 97(4), 699–715. Maslow, A.H. (1965). Eupsychian management. Homewood, IL: Dorsey. Parks-Leduc, L., Feldman, G., & Bardi, A. (2015). Personality traits and personal values: A meta-analysis. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 19(1) 3–29. Parsons, T. & Bales, R. F. (1953). Family, Socialization, and Interaction Process. Glencoe: Free Press.Prince-Gibson, E., & Schwartz, S. H. (1998). Value priorities and gender. Social Psychology Quarterly, 61, 49-67. Schwartz, S. H. (1992). Universals in the content and structure of values: Theoretical advances and empirical tests in 20 countries. Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, 25, 1-65. Schwartz, S. H. & Sagiv, L. (2000). Value Priorities and Subjective Well-Being: Direct Relations and Congruity Effects. European Journal of Social Psychology, 30, 177-198. Schwartz, S. H., Melech, G., Lehmann, A., Burgess, S., Harris, M., & Owens, V. (2001). Extending the cross-cultural validity of the theory of basic human values with a different method of measurement. Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology, 32, 519-542. Vohs, K.D., Mead, N.L. & Goode, M.R. (2006). The psychological consequences of money. Science, 314 (5802), 1154–1156. Wade, M.D., Liu, L.A. & Vacek, J. (2011). Values and Upward Influence Strategies in Transition: Evidence From the Czech Republic. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 42 (2), 288–306.
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Fasquel, Samuel. "Le barde et le bouffon." Bulletin hispanique, no. 112-2 (December 31, 2010): 587–632. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/bulletinhispanique.1228.

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Zimmer, Stefan. "A medieval linguist : Gerald de Barri." Etudes Celtiques 35, no. 1 (2003): 313–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ecelt.2003.2161.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bardi language"

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Levernier, Jacob. "The Axiology of Necrologies: Using Natural Language Processing to Examine Values in Obituaries." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/22282.

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This dissertation is centrally concerned with exploring obituaries as repositories of values. Obituaries are a publicly-available natural language source that are variably written for members of communities that are wide (nation-level) and narrow (city-level, or at the level of specific groups therein). Because they are explicitly summative, limited in size, and written for consumption by a public audience, obituaries may be expected to express concisely the aspects of their subjects' lives that the authors (often family members living in the same communities) found most salient or worthy of featuring. 140,599 obituaries nested in 832 newspapers from across the USA were scraped with permission from *Legacy.com,* an obituaries publisher. Obituaries were coded for the age at death and gender (female/male) of the deceased using automated algorithms. For each publishing newspaper, county-level median income, educational achievement (operationalized as percent of the population with a Bachelor's degree or higher), and race and ethnicity were averaged across counties, weighting by population size. A Neo4J graph database was constructed using WordNet and the University of South Florida Free Association Norms datasets. Each word in each obituary in the corpus was lemmatized. The shortest path through the WordNet graph from each lemma to 30 Schwartz value prototype words published by Bardi, Calogero, and Mullen (2008) was then recorded. From these path lengths, a new measure, "word-by-hop," was calculated for each Schwartz value to reflect the relative lexical distance between each obituary and that Schwartz value. Of the Schwartz values, Power, Conformity, and Security were most indicated in the corpus, while Universalism, Hedonism, and Stimulation were least indicated. A series of nine two-level regression models suggested that, across Schwartz values, newspaper community accounted for the greatest amount of word-by-hop variability in the corpus. The best-fitting model indicated a small, negative effect of female status across Schwartz values. Unexpectedly, Hedonism and Conformity, which had conceptually opposite prototype words, were highly correlated, possibly indicating that obituary authors "compensate" for describing the deceased in a hedonistic way by concurrently emphasizing restraint. Future research could usefully further expand word-by-hop and incorporate individual-level covariates that match the newspaper-level covariates used here.
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Sartorelli, César Augusto. "As exposições das arquitetas curadoras Lina Bo Bardi e Gisela Magalhães como linguagem de arquitetura." Universidade de São Paulo, 2014. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/16/16136/tde-10072014-154205/.

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Este trabalho tem o objetivo de analisar as exposições como um fenômeno de linguagem de arquitetura, pensando a ação de arquitetos curadores como um exercício de ressignificação do espaço onde ela será construída. Neste espaço inicial, denominado espaço base, que tem características físicas, institucionais e simbólicas será processada uma ressignificação, que parte de ideias e programas dentro de uma lógica discursiva. Esta lógica será transposta através do desenho de projeto num dispositivo de comunicação, construído através de uma narrativa espacial. Esta narrativa espacial se dá pelo encadeamento de seus setores parciais, denominados de espaços frases, com o objetivo de facilitar a comunicação do programa previsto. Estes conceitos serão aplicados a dois estudos de caso das exposições mais relevantes de duas arquitetas e curadoras realizadas no Brasil: Lina Bo Bardi e Gisela Magalhães. Como conclusão do trabalho, procurou-se estabelecer similaridades e diferenças na linguagem de arquitetura expositiva de ambas as autoras.
This work has the object to analyze the exhibitions as a phenomenon of architectural language, thinking the work of curators architects as an exercise in ressignification the space where it will be built. In this initial space, called base space, which has physical, institutional and symbolic characteristics will be processed with a ressignification, which has the starting point in the ideas and programs within a discursive logic. This logic will be implemented through the architectural project design of a communication device, constructed by a spatial narrative. This space gives the narrative thread of their partial sectors, called phrases spaces, in order to facilitate communication of the planned program. These concepts will be applied to two case studies of the most important exhibitions of two Brazilian curators architects: Lina Bo Bardi and Gisela Magalhaes. The conclusion of this work was to establish similarities and differences in the exhibition architecture language of both authors.
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Hollman, John W. "Reading skills in an African language : processing Bari orthography." Thesis, University of Reading, 1992. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.316361.

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Andriani, Luigi. "The syntax of the dialect of Bari." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2017. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/269405.

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This dissertation describes and analyses a selection of morphosyntactic phenomena from the nominal, verbal and clausal domains of Barese, an upper southern Italian dialect of Puglia. Chapter 2 analyses pragmatically unmarked and marked sentential word orders in Barese. Barese is a null-subject language whose unmarked transitive word order is (S)VO, in which syntactic constituents can be displaced in accordance with their pragmatico-semantic relevance to the discourse. One peculiarity of Barese regards intransitives encoding a loco-temporal (c)overt argument, where VS and SV orders may both mark sentence-focus. While VS encodes a null loco-temporal argument, SV serves to encode broad focus whenever S is ‘accessible’ in the mind of both discourse participants forming part of their ‘common ground’. Chapter 3 examines the structure of Barese nominal expressions, focusing on the interaction between adjectives, possessives and demonstratives. Barese nominals nearly systematically precede adjectives and possessives, except for a small class of rudimentary evaluative adjectives which may occur prenominally. These orders, derived via the phrasal movement of the nominal across its modifiers, are contrasted with the head movement of a morpholexically restricted class of kinship nominals which can be modified by a defective set of enclitic possessives. The final section analyses the behaviour of Barese demonstratives, which only occur in prenominal position. In particular, a peculiar Barese structure which combines the definite article with the distal demonstrative pronoun is analysed, highlighting how it specifically marks discourse-old referents. Chapter 4 describes the mechanisms of auxiliary selection and past participle agreement operative in Barese. In relation to the former, Barese displays three different factors which may determine auxiliary selection, namely person, tense and mood. These three dimensions of variation are analysed in terms of parameter hierarchies which formalise the complexity of the semantic features involved in the selection of the auxiliaries HAVE and BE. It is argued that this complexity reflects different diachronic stages of auxiliary selection across different generations of speakers. The final section investigates Barese active past participle agreement which, unlike auxiliary selection, displays a conservative distribution licensed by direct objects and Undergoer subjects. The peculiarity of Barese, however, is that agreement is morpholexically limited to a small number of ‘strong’ participles which mark agreement exclusively through metaphonetic alternation. The final chapter is concerned with Barese progressive and andative periphrases which variously show inflected forms of the lexical verb in the 2SG-3SG of the present in place of the infinitive. These structures have been argued for Salentino and Sicilian dialects to have developed from instances of coordination with Latin AC ‘and’, which were then reinterpreted as instances of (pseudo-)coordination, namely subordination. In contrast, a different origin for these inflected forms of the lexical verb is proposed for Barese, where AC-coordination is not historically attested. It is argued that the loss of the infinitival ending -RE produced morphophonological identity, viz. syncretism, between the 3SG(/2SG) present and the infinitive, enabling the latter to be reinterpreted as a finite form within the periphrasis. This spred further across the neighbouring dialects to include more grammatical persons (3SG/2SG > 1SG > 3PL > all), as well as past and irrealis paradigms.
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NICOLAS, EDITH. "Etude du systeme verbal du bardi, langue du nord-ouest australien, avec une presentation contrastive du systeme bunuba." Paris 7, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998PA070097.

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Ce travail porte sur l'analyse du systeme verbal de deux langues aborigenes du nord-ouest australien, le bardi et le bunuba. Les verbes bunuba et bardi ont une structure morpho-syntaxique commune. Ils possedent un systeme d'affixes personnels qui indicient les actants de la phrase, des marqueurs de temps/mode et aspect, de reflechi/reciproque, etc. Une caracteristique essentielle de ces systemes verbaux est l'existence de verbes complexes. Le verbe complexe est constitue de deux elements, le preverbe et la base verbale, dont la combinaison constitue une unite verbale. Le preverbe contient l'information semantique du verbe ; la base verbale est constituee d'un morpheme central qui joue le role de classificateur, autour duquel s'agregent les affixes evoques ci-dessus. Malgre l'existence de cette structure complexe commune, le bunuba et le bardi ne partagent pas un systeme verbal absolument identique. Les verbes bunuba sont toujours complexes, alors que la classe verbale bardi est composee pour deux tiers de verbes complexes et un tiers de verbes simples, constitues de la base verbale seule, sans preverbe. Notre analyse du verbe prend en compte les dimensions morpho-syntaxiques et semantiques. L'etude du verbe de chaque langue est constituee de trois parties : (i) une description des elements constitutifs de la base verbale ; (ii) une analyse semantique du systeme classificateur ; (iii) une reflexion sur la nature de l'element preverbal. L'analyse du systeme classificateur est au centre de cette etude. La classification verbale distingue des types d'actions, qui dependent principalement du rapport entre un mouvement et une cible. La valeur du classificateur se deduit de l'ensemble des verbes avec lesquels il est utilise. Cette valeur est liee a des parametres semantiques, mais elle peut avoir des repercussions syntaxiques. Apres avoir presente successivement les deux systemes verbaux, nous proposons une synthese comparative afin de souligner les similitudes et les differences qui seront apparues au cours de l'etude
Bardi and bunuba are two languages spoken in the kimberley region of north western australia. They share a complex verb system, typical of the australian verb prefixing languages. The verbal base carries affixes for person, tense/mode/aspect, reflexive/recirpocal, etc ; the preverb carries most of the semantic information, while the central morpheme on the verbal base works as a classifier. Bunuba verbal system is only made of complex verbs, whereas bardi has both complex and simple verbs. Simple verbs are made of the verbal base only. In that case the morpheme at the centre of the verbal base becomes the semantic verbal root. This study describes the three constituants of the verb. It offers a morpho-syntactic analysis of the verbal base ; the analysis ot the classifiying system, and then of the preverb. The verbal system of bardi is described first, followed by bunuba. This study also has a comparative perspective. The comparison of the verbal bases is included in the chapter describing the bunuba verbal base. The comparison of the classifying system figures as the concluding chapter of the study
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Debal, Kheira. "Descrizione della situazione linguistica della citta di Bari (Sud Italia) : interazione fra italiano regionale e dialetto." Lille 3, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011LIL30040.

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Mon travail de recherche est composé de trois chapitres : le premier a une fonction introductive : il vous présente la ville de Bari aussi bien d'un point de vue historique que linguistique. Ce chapitre comporte trois paragraphes : le premier est dédié à l'histoire linguistique de la ville, le second traitera les principales caractéristiques du dialecte de Bari et enfin le dernier paragraphe intitulé "la dialecte de Bari du papier au web" analyse la manière avec laquelle les nouveaux internautes vivent leur rapport avec leur propre dialecte. Le second consiste en l'étude des réponses données par 120 personnes choisies selon certains paramètres sociolinguistiques (âge, sexe, niveau d'étude). Cette étude permet de mettre en évidence des situations communicatives dans lesquelles on retrouve le dialecte et l'usage alterné italien/dialecte dans la ville de Bari. Les résultats montrent que le dialecte est encore très présent dans la ville de Bari comme le démontrent 90% des personnes interrogées. On remarquera que le dialecte est employé de manière plus courante chez les personnes âgées et beaucoup moins souvent par les personnes dont le niveau d'étude est élevé. Le dernier, qui concernera principalement l'analyse linguistique d'un enregistrement d'une durée totale de 115 minutes, contient également deux paragraphes théoriques sur la variété du répertoire linguistique italien et sur les principaux phénomènes de contact linguistique italien/dialecte. Le résultat de ces analyses montre que, même s'il est vrai que le dialecte tente à disparaître, dans la réalité quotidienne des habitants de Bari ce dernier semble bien plus vivant
My research falls into three parts : firstly, an introduction situating the town of Bari historically as well as linguistically. This chapter comprises three paragraphs : the first deals with the linguistic history of the city, the second focuses on the principal characteristics of the Bari dialect, and the last, called "Bari dialect : from paper to the web" analyses the way today's internauts have adapted their own dialect in web communications. Part two is a study of the answers provided by 120 people selected according to parameters of age, gender and educational attainment. This survey reveals the various situations where either dialect or a mix of Italian and dialect is used. The results show that dialect is still very much live in Bari, as 90% of interviewees claim to use it, particularly old people, while among the educated use is much less frequent. The third part mainly consists of a linguistic analysis of a 115-minute recordind, plus two theoretical paragraphs dealing with the width of the Italian linguistic repertory, and how this interacts with the use of dialect. The report concludes that, even though dialect is losing ground, it still plays an much more important role in the daily lives of Bari's inhabitants
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Maxson, Brian. "Reviews of Il greco a Firenze e Pier Vettori (1499–1585), by Davide Baldi; La nascita del Rinascimento a Firenze, by Anna Canonica-Sawina." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2016. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/6184.

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Books on the topic "Bardi language"

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Dann, Lucy Wiidagoo. Bardi counting book. Broome, W.A: Magabala, 2000.

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A grammar of Bardi. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, 2013.

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Jauncey, Dorothy. Bardi grubs and frog cakes: South Australian words. South Melbourne, Vic: Oxford University Press, 2004.

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Our world: Bardi Jaawi : life at Ardiyooloon. Broome, W.A: Magabala Books, 2010.

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Nasiru G. Ahmad Yan Awaki. Sha-alwashi: Barde sha-alwashi. [Kano]: Garba Mohammed Bookshop, 2001.

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'Yan'Awaki, Nasiru G. Ahmad. Sha-alwashi: Barde sha-alwashi. [Kano]: Garba Mohammed Bookshop, 2001.

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Murua, Timiasi. Suar Amur: Beginning stories ; Namiai dialect. Ukarumpa, Papua New Guinea: SIL, 2004.

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Philip, Baldi, ed. Studies in classical linguistics in honor of Philip Baldi. Leiden: Brill, 2010.

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Kamoliddin, B. Zaboni tojikī: Grammatika, matn, uslubiët, : kitobi darsi baroi sinfī 11 ... Dushanbe: Sobiriën, 2007.

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Qai͡um, Sangov. Taʺlimi leksikai zaboni tojikī dar sinfḣoi 5-6: Dastur baroi muallimon. Dushanbe: "Maorif", 1991.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bardi language"

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Bowern, Claire, and Laura Kling. "Bardi temperature terms." In Typological Studies in Language, 815–31. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/tsl.107.27bow.

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Bowern, Claire. "Bardi arguments: Referentiality, agreement and omission in Bardi discourse." In Studies in Language Companion Series, 59–85. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/slcs.104.06bow.

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Steinberger, K. E., and Robert M. Vago. "A Multileveled Autosegmental Analysis of Bari Vowel Harmony in Bari." In Publications in African Languages and Linguistics, edited by David Odden, 357–68. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110882681-028.

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Nyombe, G. Bureng, and Robert Fiengo. "Binding, Pronominals and Anaphors in Bari." In Publications in African Languages and Linguistics, edited by David Odden, 301–10. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110882681-023.

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Vincent, George Bureng. "6. Juba Arabic from a Bari Perspective." In Publications in African Languages and Linguistics, edited by Gerrit J. Dimmendahl, 71–78. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 1986. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110883350-007.

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"Bardi." In How Languages Work, 510–24. 2nd ed. Cambridge University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108553988.024.

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Johnston, Dafydd. "Welsh Bardic Miscellanies." In Insular Books. British Academy, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197265833.003.0011.

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This chapter discusses miscellanies of Welsh-language poetry, focusing on six 15th-century manuscripts from the National Library of Wales, Peniarth collection, MSS 51, 54, 55, 57, 60, and 67, all of which contain material deriving directly from contemporary poets. The formation of these miscellanies was influenced by two key aspects of Welsh bardic practice: the fact that poets and reciters were itinerant meant that numerous contributors could have access to any single manuscript collection on separate occasions, and the prevalence of memorial transmission meant that large quantities of poetry were potentially available for transcription, despite the paucity of written exemplars. Socio-political networks are evident in patrons’ miscellanies, whilst the two manuscripts belonging to poets (51 and 67) are shown to reflect the ideal of the learned bard represented by the legendary Taliesin.
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"Appendix One. The Language of the Bard." In A Carnival of Parting, 335–50. University of California Press, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520911550-015.

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"Indo-European Languages: Philip Baldi, Pennsylvania State University." In The Major Languages of Eastern Europe, 31–66. Routledge, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203216149-7.

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Herder, Johann Gottfried. "From “Briefwechsel über Ossian und die Lieder alter Völker” / “Correspondence about Ossian and the Songs of Ancient Peoples”." In Song Loves the Masses, translated by Philip V. Bohlman. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520234949.003.0009.

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a Just like you, I too am charmed by the translation of Ossian for our own people and in our own language; I am no less charmed than were it an original epic. A poet so full of sublimity, innocence, simplicity, capability, and bliss for human life must, if only in a moment of deprivation, not entirely doubt the value of great books that have an impact and touch the heart. This is so even as the poet wishes to live in a meager cabin in Scotland, where such festivities take place. … Michael Denis’s translation, moreover, reveals so much hard work and good taste, in part through the joyful force of the images, but also because of the strength of the German language, that I immediately placed it among the favorite books in my library, and I hoped that Germany might have the fortune of claiming such a bard, awakened for the Scottish by their bard. … You, however, who had previously been so obstinate in doubting the validity and authenticity of the Scottish bard, listen now to me, the defender, rather than obstinately doubting that, despite all the hard work and feeling and force and power in the German translation, our Ossian is surely no longer the true Ossian of Scotland. I do not have enough space to prove that just ...
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Conference papers on the topic "Bardi language"

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Cabrillos, Edbert Jay M., and Rowena S. Cabrillos. "Pagdihon: The Art and Language of Pottery Making in Bari, Sibalom, Antique." In GLOCAL Conference on Asian Linguistic Anthropology 2020. The GLOCAL Unit, SOAS University of London, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.47298/cala2020.8-1.

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Pottery is seen as creation of ornamentals, cooking and storing materials. Yet, while economic gains are often considered from producing these materials, the artistic and linguistic aspects have been ignored. This study discusses the factors influencing the culture of pottery, the processes of pottery making, and seeks to uncover the language used in processes of pottery making in Bari, Sibalom, Antique. A qualitative research employing ethnographic study with participant observation and face to face interviews using photo documentation, video recording and open-ended questions in gathering the data was employed. There were five manugdihon, or potters, purposively selected as key informants of the study. The study revealed that environmental factors influenced the culture of pottery making in the barangay. There were seven main processes in pottery making. These included gathering and preparing of materials, mixing the needed materials, cleaning the mixed clay, forming of desired shape, detaching, drying, and polishing and varnishing. Further findings indicate that, together the other processes, the language used in poterry making was archaic Kinaray-a, the language of the province. This language pattern suggests a specialized pottery making. Ultimately, the study suggest that the manugdihon should continue their artistic talents so that the language may be preserved. The educational institutions of the province may provide ways to include pottery making in the curriculum so that the art and language of pottery making will be preserved and promoted.
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Tanvir Alam, Md, and Md Mofijul Islam. "BARD: Bangla Article Classification Using a New Comprehensive Dataset." In 2018 International Conference on Bangla Speech and Language Processing (ICBSLP). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icbslp.2018.8554382.

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Fortunato, Bernardo, Sergio Mario Camporeale, Marco Torresi, Davide De Fazio, and Mauro Giordani. "Experimental Results of a Vertical Axis Wind Turbine." In ASME 2010 10th Biennial Conference on Engineering Systems Design and Analysis. ASMEDC, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/esda2010-25251.

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In the present paper the new wind tunnel located in the Fluid-dynamic Laboratory of the Dipartimento di Ingegneria Meccanica e Gestionale (DIMeG) of the Bari Polytechnic will be shortly described and the first experimental measurements on a vertical axis wind turbine (VAWT) will be shown. The DIMeG wind tunnel has been designed by the research group on wind energy of the Department. It is a subsonic, closed loop, wind tunnel with a transparent test part where small scale models can be analyzed. A four bladed axial fan is driven by an asynchronous three phase electric motor, which is connected to an inverter in order to change the wind speed. Angular blades have been inserted at the two curves between the fan and the test section in order to increase the uniformity of the velocity profile after the two curves. An optimization fluid-dynamic study has been carried out in order to find the best blade profile. A honeycomb has been also inserted upstream the test section in order to destroy the still existing small vorticity generated by the fan and the curves. A three-axis traversing, called Cartesian robot, has been designed and built above the test section, in order to move the hot wire probe, for wind speed measurements, by means of four step by step electric motors controlled by a personal computer. A data acquisition system has been set up. All the principal commands and controls can be performed by a dedicated personal computer, which has been programmed using LabVIEW® G-programming language. The first experimental activity has been performed on a VAWT model, of the Giromill type with parallel blades. The turbine has been connected to an AC brushless servo, able to control the braking torque. Experimental results of the flow field in two horizontal planes have been set up using a two component hot wire probe (Dantec 55R51) calibrated with the manual system Dantec 54H10. The measurement grid adopted is formed by 20 nodes in the Y direction (main flow direction) and 10 nodes in the X direction.
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