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91 results for "peasant studies" — page 3 of 5
K_5_18 — Working Memory: Cognitive Architecture and Executive Function
Working memory (WM) is the cognitive system responsible for temporarily holding and manipulating information during complex tasks such as reasoning, language comprehension, and decision-making. Distinguished from passive
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
ZG_2_13 — Dialectology: Regional Variation, Dialect Continua, and Isoglosses
Dialectology — the systematic study of regional linguistic variation — investigates how languages differ from place to place, mapping the geographical distribution of pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar, and usage pattern
ZG_2_11 — Language Isolates: Basque, Ainu, Sumerian, Burushaski
A language isolate is a language that has no demonstrable genealogical (genetic) relationship with any other known language — it stands alone, unrelated to any language family, a sole surviving branch on the tree of huma
ZG_2_04 — Oral-Formulaic Composition — Parry-Lord Theory
The oral-formulaic theory (also called the Parry-Lord theory) is one of the most influential discoveries in 20th-century humanities: the demonstration that great oral epics like Homer's Iliad and Odyssey were not compose
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_2_00 — Language Families History: Subfolder Summary
ZG_2_15 — Language Attrition: How First Languages Are Lost
Language attrition — the process by which a previously acquired language is gradually lost by an individual speaker due to reduced use and exposure — is one of the most fascinating and practically important phenomena in
ZG_5_15 — Language and Gender: Gendered Speech, Pronoun Reform, and Feminist Linguistics
Language and gender — one of the most active and ideologically charged subfields of sociolinguistics — investigates the bidirectional relationship between linguistic practice and gender: how gender shapes the way people
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_5_04 — Writing System Reform: Simplified Chinese, Turkish Latin, Hangul
Writing system reforms — deliberate, planned changes to a language's script, orthography, or writing conventions — represent some of the most dramatic and consequential acts of language planning in history. Three landmar
ZG_5_09 — Machine Translation: Rule-Based, Statistical, and Neural Approaches
Machine Translation (MT) — the use of computers to translate text or speech from one natural language to another — has been a central problem of computational linguistics and artificial intelligence since the earliest da
ZG_5_11 — Indigenous Language Revitalization: Immersion, Documentation, and Community Methods
Of the estimated 7,000+ languages spoken worldwide, approximately 40–50% are endangered — meaning they are no longer being learned by children as a first language and face extinction within the coming generations (UNESCO
ZG_1_12 — Ogham, Runic, and Northern European Writing Systems
The Ogham and Runic scripts are two distinctive writing systems that developed in the northern and western peripheries of Europe, each serving as a medium for monumental inscriptions, personal names, territorial claims,
ZG_1_14 — Mesoamerican Writing Systems: Zapotec, Mixtec, and Aztec Codices
Beyond the celebrated Maya script (the only fully developed logosyllabic writing system in the pre-Columbian Americas), Mesoamerica produced a remarkable diversity of writing and recording systems that ranged from the ea
ZG_1_15 — African Writing Systems: Bamum, Vai, N'Ko, Ge'ez, and Nsibidi
Africa has produced a remarkable diversity of indigenous writing systems spanning millennia — from the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics (c. 3200 BCE) and Meroitic script (c. 300 BCE, Kingdom of Kush) to scores of modern sc
ZG_1_04 — Chinese Characters — Logographic Writing Across Millennia
Chinese characters (hànzì, 汉字) constitute the world's longest continuously used writing system, attested from the Shang dynasty oracle bone inscriptions (~1250 BCE) to the present day — a span of over 3,200 years with no
ZG_4_13 — Language and Identity: National Languages, Minority Rights, and Linguistic Nationalism
Language and identity — the relationship between the language(s) a person speaks and their sense of self, group membership, and social belonging — is one of the most politically charged and emotionally resonant dimension
ZG_4_09 — Sociolinguistics: Language, Power, and Social Identity
Sociolinguistics is the study of the relationship between language and society — how social factors (class, gender, ethnicity, age, region, network, situation) systematically shape the way people speak, and conversely, h
ZG_4_04 — Rhetoric and Propaganda — The Power of Persuasive Language
Rhetoric — the art of persuasion through language — is one of the oldest disciplines in Western intellectual history, codified by the ancient Greeks and Romans as a systematic teachable art (technē) with principles appli
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