• anthropology with linguistic considerations. Though they developed sequentially, all three paradigms are still practiced today. The first paradigm, anthropological...
    33 KB (4,248 words) - 18:53, 24 November 2024
  • concept. A linguistic paradigm is the complete set of related word forms associated with a given lexeme. The familiar examples of paradigms are the conjugations...
    34 KB (4,214 words) - 12:41, 21 October 2024
  • Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) is a pseudoscientific approach to communication, personal development and psychotherapy, that first appeared in Richard...
    74 KB (8,410 words) - 00:02, 4 September 2024
  • Minimed Paradigm, an insulin pump made by Minimed/Medtronic Linguistic paradigm, the complete set of inflectional forms of a word. Algorithmic paradigm, a...
    2 KB (282 words) - 01:58, 20 December 2024
  • Linguistics (redirect from LinguisticS)
    Linguistics is the scientific study of language. The areas of linguistic analysis are syntax (rules governing the structure of sentences), semantics (meaning)...
    80 KB (8,969 words) - 18:28, 14 December 2024
  • Linguistic relativity asserts that language influences worldview or cognition. One form of linguistic relativity, linguistic determinism, regards peoples'...
    97 KB (11,770 words) - 21:59, 24 December 2024
  • A paradigm shift is a fundamental change in the basic concepts and experimental practices of a scientific discipline. It is a concept in the philosophy...
    30 KB (3,836 words) - 22:35, 28 September 2024
  • argument was commonly applied during the flourishing of linguistic philosophy. Lacey, Alan (1995). "paradigm case argument". In Honderich, Ted (ed.). The Oxford...
    2 KB (189 words) - 20:12, 13 May 2023
  • linguistics, morphological leveling or paradigm leveling is the generalization of an inflection across a linguistic paradigm, a group of forms with the same...
    10 KB (1,372 words) - 09:50, 6 December 2024
  • Thumbnail for Language
    of linguistic analysis that are still fundamental in many contemporary linguistic theories, such as the distinctions between syntagm and paradigm, and...
    137 KB (16,074 words) - 08:16, 25 December 2024
  • generative semantics spawned a different linguistic paradigm, known as cognitive linguistics, a linguistic theory that correlates learning of languages...
    25 KB (3,065 words) - 17:30, 22 October 2024
  • Yukio Tsuda (professor) (category Linguistic rights)
    and linguistic, cultural, and media imperialism. In contrast, an alternative theoretical orientation critical of the Diffusion of English Paradigm is what...
    11 KB (1,322 words) - 02:06, 10 March 2023
  • objectivity. It is a nominalist approach that denies that natural kinds and linguistic entities have substantive ontological implications. Rorty denies that...
    14 KB (1,864 words) - 08:40, 22 December 2024
  • Thumbnail for Inflection
    In linguistic morphology, inflection (less commonly, inflexion) is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical...
    62 KB (6,185 words) - 15:45, 20 October 2024
  • current research. Some of the linguistic features of speech, in particular of its prosody, are paralinguistic or pre-linguistic in origin. A most fundamental...
    18 KB (2,219 words) - 14:35, 14 November 2024
  • On Linguistic Aspects of Translation is an essay written by Russian-American linguist Roman Jakobson in 1959. It was published in On Translation, a compendium...
    3 KB (461 words) - 00:48, 1 October 2024
  • languages change over time. It seeks to understand the nature and causes of linguistic change and to trace the evolution of languages. Historical linguistics...
    22 KB (2,489 words) - 01:51, 23 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Linguistic landscape
    linguistic landscape refers to the "visibility and salience of languages on public and commercial signs in a given territory or region". Linguistic landscape...
    42 KB (4,829 words) - 08:49, 11 November 2024
  • between linguistic knowledge and linguistic competency. In particular, given finite and possibly incomplete input, how do children in different linguistic environments...
    15 KB (2,088 words) - 01:52, 8 November 2023
  • leads to new paradigms. New paradigms then ask new questions of old data, move beyond the mere "puzzle-solving" of the previous paradigm, alter the rules...
    59 KB (7,777 words) - 20:24, 12 December 2024
  • Thumbnail for Functional linguistics
    communicative needs of the speaker and of the given language community.: 5–6  Linguistic functionalism spawned in the 1920s to 1930s from Ferdinand de Saussure's...
    29 KB (3,157 words) - 11:58, 30 November 2024
  • modern and classical liberals. This dichotomy is often a component of paradigm shift. However, it is rarely the case that there are only two schools in...
    4 KB (354 words) - 17:25, 10 October 2024
  • Some paradigms do not make use of the same stem throughout; this phenomenon is called suppletion. An example of a suppletive paradigm is the paradigm for...
    8 KB (920 words) - 14:21, 10 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Proto-Indo-European homeland
    The Proto-Indo-European homeland was the prehistoric linguistic homeland of the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE). From this region, its speakers migrated...
    119 KB (14,055 words) - 04:49, 20 November 2024
  • not the PIE sense) throughout the paradigm in Baltic (Lithuanian first accentual paradigm) and Slavic (accent paradigm a). Russian exhibits "polnoglasie"...
    100 KB (11,145 words) - 20:14, 12 December 2024
  • on Indo-European languages and his critical reformulation of the linguistic paradigm established by Ferdinand de Saussure. Benveniste was born in Aleppo...
    9 KB (1,097 words) - 03:46, 11 November 2024
  • influential in both academic and popular circles, introducing the term paradigm shift, which has since become an English-language idiom. Kuhn made several...
    40 KB (4,321 words) - 17:51, 24 December 2024
  • value), and in inflecting languages, has a corresponding inflectional paradigm. That is, a lexeme in many languages will have many different forms. For...
    6 KB (637 words) - 22:19, 11 October 2024
  • linguistics – application of linguistic theory to the field of Speech-Language Pathology. Computational linguistics – study of linguistic issues in a way that...
    19 KB (1,763 words) - 18:34, 6 December 2024
  • Syntax (redirect from Linguistic syntax)
    as a branch of biology, since it conceives of syntax as the study of linguistic knowledge as embodied in the human mind. Other linguists (e.g., Gerald...
    26 KB (2,851 words) - 19:07, 22 December 2024