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5 Danny De Weerdt Existential sentences in Flemish Sign Language and Finnish Sign Language

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Reviewers of SKY JoL 29 (2016) ... 5 Danny De Weerdt

Existential sentences in Flemish Sign Language

and Finnish Sign Language ... 7 Marwan Jarrah & Aseel Zibin

Syntactic investigation of nunation in Haili Arabic ... 39 Maria Reile

Distance, visual salience, and contrast expressed through different

demonstrative systems: An experimental study in Estonian ... 63 Christoph Schubert

Cohesion in contrast: A case study of English and German

user manuals ... 95 Selina Sharmin, Mari Wiklund & Liisa Tiittula

The reading process of dynamic text – A linguistic approach to an eye movement study ... 119 Squibs:

Pius W. Akumbu

Babanki negation patterns ... 147 Satu Hopponen

Evolutionary viewpoints on quantal vowels: A review of arguments for and against the existence of quantal vowels in H. neanderthalensis ... 161 Francesco-Alessio Ursini

Metaphors below the sentence level: The case of appositives ... 179

Viittaukset

LIITTYVÄT TIEDOSTOT

Close analysis of the three interactional situations provides grounded hypotheses for future study on fingerspelling, multimodality in signed interaction as well as to

The interviews were qualitative research interviews (Kvale 1996), dealing with the following themes: 1) how the students saw their mother tongue(s), 2) whether they saw themselves

Melike Uzal, Erkki Komulainen, Mehmet Akif Kɩlɩç & Olli Aaltonen Detection of non-native speech in a familiar language. and in an unfamiliar

Because there are no differences in the identity of the bearer, the following will not make a distinction between the groups, but rather investigate all name signs as

The number of existential sentences with an overt HEEFT / OLLA is higher in Finnish Sign Language than Flemish Sign Language, while the omission of such lexical signs appears

Our results demonstrated that in reading speech-to-text interpreted text, the first and second landing points in regressions are mostly content words (in 90.8% cases),

In the modern bilingual lexicons of Finnish Sign Language (FinSL) published in 1973 (Viittomakielen kuvasanakirja [1977]), 1998 (SVPK) and 2002 (Suvi; online

On the one hand, he uses continuously such words as 'analogy', 'similarity', and'parallelism'; and he clearly assumes that the plausibility of the hypothesis that