RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
40 results for "Tok Pisin" — page 1 of 2
ZG_2_09 — Tok Pisin, Lingua Francas, and Global Contact Languages
A lingua franca (from medieval Italian — originally denoting the pidginized Romance-based trade language of the Mediterranean, the "Frankish tongue") is any language used as a common medium of communication between speak
ZG_2_02 — Pidgins, Creoles, and Language Contact Phenomena
Pidgins and creoles are languages born from contact between groups with no shared language — they offer a natural laboratory for studying how human linguistic capacity creates new grammatical systems under extreme condit
ZG_2_19 — Creole Languages & Contact Linguistics
Creole languages — fully grammaticalized natural languages that arise from contact between speakers of mutually unintelligible languages — are among the most important phenomena in linguistics, bearing directly on fundam
Q_4_10 — Fluid Dynamics: Turbulence, Navier-Stokes, and the Millennium Problem
Fluid dynamics is the study of the motion of fluids (liquids and gases) — a branch of physics with applications spanning aeronautics, meteorology, oceanography, astrophysics, cardiovascular medicine, chemical engineering
O_5_06 — Subglacial Lakes: Vostok, Whillans, and Antarctic Hidden Water
Beneath the Antarctic ice sheet — Earth's largest body of ice, up to ~4.8 km thick — lies a vast network of more than 400 subglacial lakes, bodies of liquid water maintained by geothermal heat from the underlying bedrock
S_3_13 — Nuclear Fusion Progress: ITER, NIF Ignition, and Compact Tokamaks
Nuclear fusion — the process powering stars, in which light atomic nuclei combine to form heavier nuclei and release enormous energy — has been pursued as a potential source of virtually unlimited, clean energy since the
A_1_23 — Proto-Writing & Token Systems: Precursors to Cuneiform
The invention of writing in Mesopotamia around 3200 BCE was not a sudden innovation but the culmination of an 8,000-year evolution of information recording technologies. Beginning with simple geometric clay tokens in the
A_1_20 — Elamite and Proto-Elamite Script: Iran's Undeciphered Writing Systems
The Elamite civilization of southwestern Iran — centered on the cities of Susa and Anshan — was one of the earliest complex societies of the ancient Near East, rivaling Sumer and Akkad yet remaining far less understood d
A_1_22 — Proto-Writing Development and Precursors to Cuneiform
The transition from pre-literate record-keeping to cuneiform script spanned approximately 5,000 years, from small geometric clay tokens used for commodity tracking in the Neolithic (c. 8000 BCE) through the emergence of
W_5_14 — Mapuche Civilization: Resistance, Cosmovision, and Araucanian Culture
The Mapuche ("People of the Land") — also historically known by the Spanish term Araucanians — are an indigenous people of south-central Chile and southwestern Argentina who achieved something nearly unique in the histor
ZF_1_15 — Wave Physics: Wind Waves, Swell, and Coastal Dynamics
Ocean surface waves are the most visible expression of ocean-atmosphere energy transfer — created by wind blowing across the water surface, they travel across entire ocean basins and dissipate their energy on distant coa
Z_2_23 — Immune System & Immunology
The immune system is a multi-layered defense network that protects organisms against pathogens including bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. It comprises two interconnected arms: innate immunity, which provides rapi
K_5_20 — Psychoneuroimmunology: Mind-Body-Immune Connections
Psychoneuroimmunology (PNI) — the study of interactions between psychological processes, the nervous system, and immune function — has established that the mind directly influences immune defense and that immune activity
E_4_10 — Ice Core Science: Greenland and Antarctic Climate Records
Ice cores drilled from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets constitute one of the most powerful archives of past climate on Earth. Greenland cores (GRIP, GISP2, NGRIP, NEEM) provide high-resolution records extending ba
ZG_1_20 — Sign Language & Gestural Origins of Language
The study of sign languages has profoundly transformed our understanding of both language and its evolutionary origins — demonstrating that language is modality-independent (not inherently tied to speech) and providing c
ZG_1_02 — Cuneiform — The World's First Writing System
Cuneiform — from Latin cuneus ("wedge") — is the earliest known writing system, invented in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) by the Sumerians circa 3400–3100 BCE in the city of Uruk. It began as a system of pictographi
ZG_4_07 — Constructed Languages — Esperanto, Tolkien, and Beyond
Constructed languages (conlangs) are languages deliberately designed by individuals or groups rather than having evolved naturally — they range from international auxiliary languages (IALs) designed to facilitate cross-c
ZG_4_20 — Sign Language Linguistics & Deaf Culture
Sign languages are fully developed natural languages with complete phonological, morphological, syntactic, and semantic systems — not manual codes for spoken languages, not pantomime, and not universal. There are over 30
ZG_4_02 — Sign Language — Gestural Communication and Deaf Culture
Sign languages are fully developed natural languages that use the visual-gestural modality — hands, face, body, and spatial relationships — instead of the auditory-vocal channel to express the same range of linguistic co
ZG_3_16 — Sign Language Typology: Structure, Diversity, and the Linguistics of Gesture
Sign languages — natural human languages that use the visual-gestural modality rather than the vocal-auditory channel — are among the most powerful demonstrations that human linguistic capacity is not bound to speech. Th
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields