RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
235 results for "contact linguistics" — page 2 of 12
F_1_19 — Irish Monks in America: The Brendan Voyage and Pre-Columbian North Atlantic Contacts
The hypothesis that Irish monks reached Iceland, the Faroe Islands, and possibly North America before the Norse has a foundation in medieval literary, place-name, and archaeological evidence, though the most ambitious cl
F_1_08 — Trans-Pacific Contact — Pre-Columbian Connections
The Pacific Ocean — covering over 165 million km² — was long assumed to be an impenetrable barrier to pre-Columbian cultural exchange between Asia/Oceania and the Americas. However, a growing body of botanical, genetic,
F_1_11 — Sweet Potato Paradox — Pre-Columbian Trans-Pacific Contact Evidence
The sweet potato paradox — the presence of Ipomoea batatas (a plant of unambiguous South American origin) across Polynesia in pre-Columbian contexts — is the single most widely accepted piece of evidence for trans-Pacifi
I_5_04 — UFO Religions — Raëlism, Heaven's Gate, and Cultural Response to Contact
UFO religions — new religious movements incorporating extraterrestrial beings into their cosmology and soteriology — emerged primarily in the mid-to-late 20th century as a cultural response to the Space Age, the decline
C_5_30 — Star People Origins: Celestial Ancestry Myths Worldwide
Traditions of celestial ancestry — the belief that humanity, or a founding lineage, originated from or was taught by beings from specific stars or constellations — are found across dozens of cultures worldwide. The Dogon
ZG_2_10 — Language Documentation and Field Methods
Language documentation is the systematic recording, annotation, preservation, and dissemination of a language's spoken (and signed) forms — encompassing its phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and the f
ZG_2_08 — Etymology and Historical Word Origins
Etymology is the study of the origin, history, and changing meanings of words — tracing the life of a word from its earliest attested form (or its reconstructed proto-form) through the centuries of sound change, semantic
ZG_5_13 — Language and Law: Legal Language, Plain Language Movement, and Interpretation
Language and law — the intersection of linguistics and legal systems — encompasses the study of legal language as a distinctive register, the application of forensic linguistics (linguistic expertise in legal proceedings
ZG_5_07 — Discourse Analysis: Conversation Structure, Coherence, and Power
Discourse analysis — the study of language in use beyond the sentence — investigates how sequences of sentences, utterances, and texts are organized, how they create coherence and meaning, and how they relate to social s
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_05 — Language and Thought: Cognitive Semantics
The relationship between language and thought — whether the language we speak shapes, constrains, or determines how we perceive, categorize, and reason about the world — is one of the oldest and most debated questions in
ZG_3_12 — Metaphor Theory: Lakoff, Blending, and Figurative Language as Cognition
Metaphor theory — the study of how figurative language works and what it reveals about human thought — underwent a revolutionary transformation in the late 20th century with the publication of George Lakoff and Mark John
UAP_Ancient_Civilizations_Nexus
This interdisciplinary document examines the proposed connections between modern UAP (Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena) research and ancient civilizations — a nexus that spans sky-god narratives, anomalous archaeological
ZC_5_13 — Linguistic Anthropology: Language, Culture, and Sapir-Whorf
Linguistic anthropology — one of the four traditional subfields of American anthropology (alongside cultural, biological/physical, and archaeological anthropology) — studies the relationships between language and social
T_3_08 — Psychology of Language and Bilingualism
Psycholinguistics — the study of psychological processes underlying language production, comprehension, and acquisition — spans one of the deepest questions in cognitive science: how do humans acquire, process, and use l
ZD_2_03 — Natural Language Processing
Natural language processing (NLP) — the computational analysis, understanding, and generation of human language — spans rule-based, statistical, and neural approaches across tasks including machine translation, text clas
F_1_02 — Cocaine and Nicotine in Egyptian Mummies — The Balabanova Controversy
In 1992, German toxicologist Svetlana Balabanova published findings of cocaine, nicotine, and hashish in Egyptian mummies held at the Munich Museum, igniting one of the most contentious debates in archaeology. Since coca
F_1_14 — Pre-Columbian Chicken Debate: Polynesian–South American Evidence
The pre-Columbian chicken debate centers on whether domestic chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) — an Old World species originally domesticated in Southeast Asia — reached South America before European contact (1492+), v
F_4_10 — Roman Indian Ocean Trade and the Periplus
Rome's Indian Ocean trade network was one of the most extensive commercial systems of the ancient world, linking the Mediterranean to India, Sri Lanka, and Southeast Asia from the 1st century BCE through the 3rd century
I_5_16 — Indigenous UAP Knowledge and Traditional Sky Lore
Indigenous cultures worldwide preserve traditions describing luminous objects in the sky, beings descending from above, and ancestral connections to celestial origins. The Hopi "Ant People" (Anu Sinom) who sheltered huma
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields