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321 results for "Costa Rica" — page 9 of 17
ZG_5_06 — Lexicography: Dictionary Making from Johnson to Digital
Lexicography — the art and science of dictionary making — is among the oldest scholarly enterprises concerned with language, stretching from ancient Mesopotamian word lists (Sumerian-Akkadian bilingual glossaries, c. 230
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_1_07 — Mayan Glyphs — Decipherment and Historical Linguistics
The Maya script — the only Mesoamerican writing system known to fully represent spoken language — is a logosyllabic system combining ~800 distinct signs (logograms for words, syllabograms for syllables, and determinative
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_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_10 — Code-Switching and Multilingual Discourse
Code-switching is the practice of alternating between two or more languages (or language varieties) within a single conversation, sentence, or even a single word — a phenomenon observed wherever multilingual speakers int
ZG_4_14 — Language Policy and Planning: Status, Corpus, and Acquisition Planning
Language policy and planning (LPP) refers to the deliberate efforts by governments, institutions, and communities to influence the status, form, and use of languages and language varieties within a society. Einar Haugen
ZG_3_11 — Phonology: Sound Systems, Distinctive Features, and Phonological Rules
Phonology — the branch of linguistics concerned with the systematic organization of speech sounds in natural languages — studies not the physical sounds themselves (that is phonetics) but the abstract cognitive system by
J_3_06 — Megalithic Construction Techniques
The quarrying, transport, and erection of megaliths — large stone blocks ranging from several tons to over 1,000 tons — is one of the most impressive and debated aspects of ancient engineering. Major megalithic achieveme
J_1_08 — Ancient Optics, Lenses, and Light Technology
Ancient civilizations possessed a greater understanding of optics and light than is commonly recognized. Archaeological evidence includes polished crystal lenses (the Nimrud lens, ~750 BCE; Visby lenses, ~11th c. CE), so
J_2_01 — Ancient Metallurgy and Experimental Archaeology
Ancient metallurgy represents some of humanity's most sophisticated material science, including achievements that weren't replicated until centuries or millennia later. Damascus/wootz steel contains carbon NANOTUBES — di
Q_1_07 — CMB Anomalies and the Axis of Evil
The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) — the afterglow of the Big Bang, emitted ~380,000 years after the universe began — is the most precisely measured radiation in the history of science. It matches the theoretical pred
Q_1_03 — Ancient Cosmologies Compared: How Civilizations Understood the Universe
Every civilization on Earth constructed a cosmology — a model of how the universe began, how it is structured, and how it will end. What is remarkable is not the differences but the convergences: primordial waters as the
Q_4_12 — Optics: Refraction, Diffraction, and the Nature of Light
Optics — the science of light and vision — is one of the oldest branches of physics, with roots in ancient Greece, the Islamic Golden Age, and the European Scientific Revolution, and it remains central to modern technolo
INTERDOC_21 — Meditation, Mysticism, and the Neuroscience Bridge
[KEY FINDING] Richard Davidson's lab at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, beginning in 2004, demonstrated that long-term meditators (>10,000 hours) — particularly Tibetan Buddhist monks — generate gamma wave oscillati
INTERDOC_11 — Mitochondrial Eve, Y-Chromosomal Adam, and the Convergence Problem
Mitochondrial Eve — the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of all living humans through an unbroken maternal line — was identified through mtDNA analysis by Rebecca Cann, Mark Stoneking, and Allan Wilson at UC Berkeley i
ZB_5_13 — Ecological Economics: Valuing Nature's Services
Ecological economics is a transdisciplinary field that treats the human economy as a subsystem embedded within — and fundamentally dependent upon — the finite biophysical systems of the Earth, challenging the neoclassica
ZC_5_21 — Intergenerational Trauma: Epigenetic Inheritance and Collective Wounds
Intergenerational trauma (also transgenerational or historical trauma) refers to the transmission of traumatic effects from one generation to subsequent generations through psychological, behavioral, social, and — contro
ZC_2_03 — Intergenerational & Collective Trauma
Intergenerational trauma refers to the transmission of traumatic effects from one generation to the next — a phenomenon observed across populations including Holocaust survivor families, Indigenous communities subjected
G_4_18 — Biogeography and Ancient Distribution Patterns
Biogeography — the study of the spatial distribution of organisms across the planet, both present and past — is one of the most powerful frameworks for understanding Earth history, evolutionary processes, and the mechani
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