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         Language And Linguistics:     more books (100)
  1. Understanding Language: Towards a Post-Chomskyan Linguistics by Terence Moore, Christine Carling, 1982-10-28
  2. American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America (Oxford Studies in Anthropological Linguistics) by Lyle Campbell, 2000-09-21
  3. The English Language: A Historical Introduction (Cambridge Approaches to Linguistics) by Charles Barber, Joan C. Beal, et all 2009-04-27
  4. English as a Global Language by David Crystal, 2003-07-28
  5. Linguistics, Sixth Edition: An Introduction to Language and Communication by Adrian Akmajian, Richard A. Demers, et all 2010-04-30
  6. Linguistic Perspectives on Second Language Acquisition (Cambridge Applied Linguistics)
  7. Language Contact, Creolization, and Genetic Linguistics by Sarah Grey Thomason, Terrence Kaufman, 1992-02-12
  8. An Introduction to Language by Victoria Fromkin, Robert Rodman, et all 2010-01-01
  9. The Unfolding of Language: An Evolutionary Tour of Mankind's Greatest Invention by Guy Deutscher, 2006-05-01
  10. The Power of Babel: A Natural History of Language by John Mcwhorter, 2003-01
  11. Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics: Index Volume
  12. Lexical Acculturation in Native American Languages (Oxford Studies in Anthropological Linguistics, 20) by Cecil H. Brown, 1999-02-04
  13. Computational Linguistics: An Introduction (Studies in Natural Language Processing) by Ralph Grishman, 1986-11-28
  14. The Handbook of Second Language Acquisition (Blackwell Handbooks in Linguistics)

21. ACM: Computing Research Repository
An electronic repository of fulltext papers in computational linguistics, natural language processing, speech processing.
http://www.acm.org/pubs/corr/
Computing research relies heavily on the rapid dissemination of results. As a result, the formal process of submitting papers to journals has been augmented by other, more rapid, dissemination methods. Originally these involved printed documents, such as technical reports and conference papers. Then researchers started taking advantage of the Internet, putting papers on ftp sites and later on various web sites. But these resources were fragmented. There was no single repository to which researchers from the whole field of computing could submit reports, no single place to search for research results, and no guarantee that information would be archived at the end of a research project. This changed in September 1998. Through a partnership of ACM , the Los Alamos e-Print archive , and NCSTRL (Networked Computer Science Technical Reference Library), an online Computing Research Repository (CoRR) has been established. The CoRR is available to all members of the community at no charge. We encourage you to use the service right away. It gains in value as more researchers use it. Submitting your research articles to the repository will be the surest way to have your work reach a wide audience. From here you can

22. Georgetown University Department Of Arabic Language, Literature And Linguistics
B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. programs. Emphasizes intensive proficiencybased teaching of Arabic language and culture at the undergraduate level and literature and linguistics at the graduate level. Degree requirements, summer program, study abroad, scholarships.
http://www.georgetown.edu/departments/arabic/
U.S. need Arabists
Georgetown University
Department of Arabic Language,
Literature and Linguistics
P. O. Box 571046
Washington, D.C. 20057-1046
Phone: (202) 687-5743
Fax: (202) 687-2408
W elcome to the Department of Arabic Language, Literature and Linguistics at Georgetown University Courses Spring 2003 New Courses

"In Arabic – the only semitic language that has remained the language of a whole civilization – ideas spring forth from the vein of the sentence as sparks
from the flint". Louis Massignon arabic@georgetown.edu

23. Sinhala Language Page
A site devoted to the Sinhala (Sinhalese) language, culture and linguistics.
http://www.sinhalapage.com
Saturday, March 22, 2003 Resources Directory Discussion Forum Quiz New Projects. Be a part of it! Publish your literary works at SinhalaPage.com! You are invited to submit your poems, short stories, novels, book reviews, articles and any literary work in Sinhala and/or English for publications in this site. SinhalaPage can assist you with generating Sinhala and English electronic documents. All you have to do is to provide content, and we will do the rest. For further information, contact us. What's New: (updated 08 November 2002)
The Resources Directory is added. This is a searchable database of resources relating to various aspects of Sinhala language and culture. Now all the users can add, browse and search resources. Currently the Resources Directory contain only a limited number of records, as I am in the process of adding new ones into the database.
I have redesigned all the pages. The new content will be added gradually and please send your feedback.
If you arrived here through (www.anu.edu.au/linguistics/sinhala/), please update your bookmarks.

24. Association For Persian Language, Linguistics And Computing
Mailing lists and information for people working on different aspects of the Persian language.
http://www.cogsci.ed.ac.uk/~apl2c/
APL2C Home Page
This picture is a stamp printed in 1990 on the 1000th anniversary of Ferdowsi. Welcome to the home page of the Association for Persian Language, Linguistics and Computing (APL2C) administrated from the Centre for Cognitive Science , University of Edinburgh.
About APL2C
APL2C Newsletter
APL2C Special Interest Groups

25. Standardization And Implementations Of Thai Language
Details on Thai encoding, input and output mechanisms, linguistics and standards. PDF document, requires Acrobat Reader.
http://www.nectec.or.th/it-standards/thaistd_tr.pdf

26. Anthropological Linguistics
Concise treatments of various areas of concern in this field, including contact languages and the Whorf hypothesis.
http://emuseum.mnsu.edu/cultural/language/topics_in_anthropological_lingui.html
Topics in Anthropological Linguistics
Chimpanzee Communication Pidgins and Creoles Structural Linguistics Tonal Languages ... Whorf Hypothesis

27. Centre For Computational Linguistics K.U.Leuven
The main objective of the Centre for Computational linguistics at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven is to promote basic research in formal and computational linguistics, and the application of this research in natural language processing.
http://www.ccl.kuleuven.ac.be/
Centre for Computational Linguistics
Welcome to the home page of the Centre for Computational Linguistics (CCL) at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven . This server offers a survey of the ongoing research and development activities. It also provides details about the conferences, workshops, and lectures organised at the centre. Please send all your questions, suggestions, and problem reports to webmaster@ccl.kuleuven.ac.be
Local Information
Other Information

Layout: webmaster@ccl.kuleuven.ac.be
Information Provider: Centre for Computational Linguistics
Comments to the webmaster Last modification: March 26, 2001 URL: http://www.ccl.kuleuven.ac.be/Welcome.html

28. Ethnologue Report For Suriname
An overview of the Amerindian languages spoken in Suriname, the number and locations of the speakers of each, and their relationships to overall language families, is presented here by the Summer Institute of linguistics Ethnologue database.
http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=Suriname

29. 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
and Evaluation Research Unit
  • Research and consultancy TEEP test
English Pronunciation Research Unit
  • Research and consultancy
  • Page maintained by p.a.thompson@reading.ac.uk
    Last revised: March 2003

    30. Georgetown University Department Of East Asian Languages And Cultures -
    Undergraduate degree program through the Department of East Asian languages and Cultures. language instruction courses as well as culture, literature, and linguistics courses taught in English. Major and minor degree requirements, overseas studies, news, and resources.
    http://www.georgetown.edu/departments/asian/p_requir-c.htm

    Class Schedules

    Course Descriptions

    Resources


    CHINESE MAJOR The Chinese major combines thorough training in spoken and written Chinese language with the development of critical approaches to a broad range of Chinese cultural phenomena including classical and modern literature, visual arts, film, popular culture, and underlying aspects of philosophical and social thought. Most courses are conducted in Chinese with readings in Chinese. The major, which is not open to advanced native speakers due to the limited number of advanced courses, begins with language work and a writing-intensive introduction to important issues in East Asian culture (CHIN-024 "East Asia: Texts and Contexts"), and proceeds through advanced coursework in language and culture, classical and modern (often including a semester or year abroad). In order to familiarize themselves with relevant critical and historical issues in the field, students must take at least one of the courses on Chinese culture offered by the department in English in addition to "East Asia: Texts and Contexts." The major culminates in a Senior Seminar paper or Senior Honors Thesis on a topic of the student's interest within the area of Chinese cultural studies. In addition to courses offered by this department, a wide variety of Asian studies courses is available through other departments. It is highly recommended that Chinese majors fulfill their general education history requirement by taking courses in Chinese or Asian history. Beyond that, China-related courses are offered in Economics, Government, International Affairs, Theology, and other fields. These can serve as free electives for Chinese majors, or can in some cases fulfill general education requirements. Finally, such outside courses can often be counted toward an Asian Studies Certificate through the Area Studies Programs. Students should seek help from their department advisers in developing a well-integrated academic program built around their interests and drawing upon this rich variety of resources.

    31. Lavender Languages X Conference -- February 14-16, 2003
    Formal papers, roundtable discussions, performance pieces and other presentations which explore language, linguistics, literature, nonverbal communication, cinema, photography, and visual arts. Background, scheduled events, and previous presentations.
    http://www.american.edu/lavenderlanguages/
    The 10th Annual American University Conference on Lavender Languages and Linguistics Washington, DC
    February 14-16, 2003
    for more information, contact: Bill Leap, Conference coordinator
    An all-but-final version of the CONFERENCE AGENDA is now available for your review.
    And so is a draft copy of the paper that Morrish and Leap will discuss in their Saturday morning session,
    "Identity, desire and beyond: Rethinking research goals in lavender language studies."
    And so are some of the texts which presenters will discuss during Friday's text
    analysis workshop.

    CONFERENCE REGISTRATION

    The registration fee is $ 10.00 for those employed and $ 5.00 (or sliding scale) for students and those
    between jobs. The registration table is open in the 6th floor Board Room, Butler Pavilion, throughout the
    conference. Registration fees help offset the costs of refreshments and related on-site conference expenses.
    Advance registration is not required. Contents: Background Conference Focus PLENARY SESSION FEATURED SPEAKER THE CONFERENCE AGENDA (020103) ... Join the Conference mailing list!

    32. WWW Info On Computational Linguistics/Language Technology
    Introductory information and a directory of resources in theoretical and applied computational linguistics.
    http://www.coli.uni-sb.de/~hansu/cl.html
    H ans U szkoreit:
    C omputational L L anguage T echnology on the W eb

    Visit our most comprehensive information service: LT World What is Computational Linguistics a brief introduction to the discipline State of the Art in Language Technology the WWW version of a comprehensive book on all aspects of language technology written by more than 50 international experts in the field; funded by the European Commission and the National Science Foundation: a successful result of USAmerican - EUropean scientific cooperation (The book is published by Giardini and Cambridge University Press). Comprehensive Information Servers HLTCentral , A service funded by the EU IST Programme
    The ACL NLP/CL Universe
    , Association for Computational Linguistics
    ELSNET
    , European Network for Language and Speech
    COLIBRI
    , an info server at the University of Utrecht
    The LINGUIST List
    , the international info site for linguistics CL/NLP Literature
    bibliographic references and online publications Funding Agencies and Programs EU, EU Countries, USA Professional Organizations Intl.and German organizations

    33. CLUK: Computational Linguistics UK
    Britain's special interest group for computational linguistics. News, organizational information, and general information on the British natural language processing research community.
    http://www.dcs.shef.ac.uk/research/cluk/
    Help build up the CLUK database of NLP researchers!
    CLUK aims to
    • provide a forum for the computational linguistics community in the UK represent the views of the UK computational linguistics community in SALT and UK funding bodies
    CLUK Information
    Annual CLUK Colloquium
    NLP Information
    Last modified: 22 July 2002

    34. Ethnologue Report For Guyana
    An overview of the Amerindian languages spoken in Guyana, the number and locations of the speakers of each, and their relationships to overall language families, is presented here by the Summer Institute of linguistics Ethnologue database.
    http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=Guyana

    35. The Homepage Of Integrational Linguistics
    A specific approach to linguistics combining a comprehensive theory of language and a theory of grammars.
    http://camelot.germanistik.fu-berlin.de/il/
    Integrational Linguistics, linguistics, theory of language, theory of grammars, grammar, phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, English, German, Chinese, Spanish Your browser does not support frames.
    The non-frames version of the Homepage of Integrational Linguistics will not be supported after Dec 31, 1999. Please update your browser.
    Die frame-lose Version der Homepage der Integrativen Sprachwissenschaft
    . Le recomendamos, por tanto, que instale un navegador capacitado para visualizar los marcos.

    36. CRL Home
    Concentrates on multilingual processing of natural language texts. Core research areas are AI, computational linguistics, and humancomputer interaction. Has papers, data, and software.
    http://crl.nmsu.edu/
    Home Resources Employment Research ... CRL Internal Welcome to the Computing Research Laboratory (CRL) web site. CRL, at New Mexico State University, is a non-profit, self-supporting research enterprise committed to basic research and software development in advanced computing applications. Administratively, CRL is a research department in NMSU's College of Arts and Sciences.
    CRL was established in 1983 by the New Mexico Legislature "to be a center of excellence in advanced computing applications and to enhance the state's leadership in science and technology."
    CRL's basic research efforts are concentrated on practically all extant approaches to multilingual processing of natural language texts. Fields of study that contribute to this endeavor and are thus among the core areas of research at CRL are: Artificial intelligence Computational linguistics Human-computer interaction Concrete applications include a variety of configurations and language pair combinations of: Machine translation Information extraction Information retrieval Text summarization Knowledge acquisition Computer-assisted authoring Teaching and learning Translator workstation systems CRL is also pursuing research and development in speech processing, multiagent environments and architectures, multimedia and custom solutions for information technology needs and requirements of government and business organizations.

    37. Jiwarli, A Language Of Western Australia
    This site aims to introduce you to the Jiwarli language, culture and region. Hear Jiwarli being spoken by the last native speaker, see photos and maps of the area in which it was spoken.
    http://www.linguistics.unimelb.edu.au/research/projects/jiwarli/
    You are here: Arts School Languages Linguistics ... Research
    A LANGUAGE OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA
    Jack Butler, the last native speaker of Jiwarli. The area where Jiwarli was spoken.
    Welcome to the Jiwarli webpage!
    Jiwarli is an Australian Aboriginal language from Western Australia. In about 1926, the traditional activities of the Jiwarli and their neighbours fell into disuse, and Jack Butler, the last native speaker of Jiwarli, died in April 1986. In circumstances like these, recorded languages are very helpful in understanding more about how cultures worked. There were probably between 250 and 270 Australian Aboriginal languages at the time of European invasion. Unfortunately, about 160 are now extinct, and some 70 are severely threatened today. Only around 20 are still considered "strong" at the present time. This site aims to introduce you to the Jiwarli language, culture and region. You can hear Jiwarli being spoken by the last native speaker, see photos and maps of the area in which it was spoken and much more. We hope that you enjoy learning about Jiwarli, and that through sites like these we can all help reverse the current process of the loss of Australian Aboriginal language and cultural heritage.
    Created: 17th November, 1998

    38. Samisk Språkråd
    language database and grammatical notes on Saami/Lappish, including a series of domainspecific searchable word lists. In Saami and Norwegian.
    http://www.samisk-sr.no/

    39. Weiterleitung
    Includes online issues, subscription information, editorial team and instructions for authors.
    http://www.degruyter.de/journals/linguistics/index.html

    40. Statistical NLP / Corpus-based Computational Linguistics Resources
    An annotated list of resources in this field and the allied discipline of statistical natural language processing. Corpora, tools, literature and other resources.
    http://www-nlp.stanford.edu/links/statnlp.html
    Statistical natural language processing and corpus-based computational linguistics: An annotated list of resources
    Contents
    Tools Taggers Parsers Language models ... Societies
    Tools
    Part of Speech Taggers
    Freely downloadable
    fnTBL
    A fast and flexible implementation of Transformation-Based Learning. Includes a tagger, but also NP chunking, etc.
    mu-TBL
    Original Xerox Tagger
    A common lisp HMM tagger available by ftp . There is also an adaptation for Spanish from the CRATER project.
    Brill's Transformation-based learning Tagger
    A C symbolic tagger. Also available by ftp , and as a Windows version , with stuff for French.
    TreeTagger
    A decision tree based tagger from the University of Stuttgart (Helmut Scmid). It's language independent, but comes complete with parameter files for English, German, French, and Italian. (Solaris and Linux versions.) Used at visl.hum.ou.dk
    Maximum Entropy part of speech tagger
    By Adwait Ratnaparkhi. JAVA version now downloadable. A sentence boundary detector is also available. [Helpful hint: This only works with JDK1.1. It

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