Modality and Structure in Signed and Spoken Languages
Herausgeber: Meier, Richard P.; Quinto-Pozos, David; Cormier, Kearsy
Modality and Structure in Signed and Spoken Languages
Herausgeber: Meier, Richard P.; Quinto-Pozos, David; Cormier, Kearsy
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Signed languages are the visual-gestural languages of deaf communities. This book investigates their linguistic properties.
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Signed languages are the visual-gestural languages of deaf communities. This book investigates their linguistic properties.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 500
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Januar 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 804g
- ISBN-13: 9780521112581
- ISBN-10: 0521112583
- Artikelnr.: 26032891
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 500
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Januar 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 804g
- ISBN-13: 9780521112581
- ISBN-10: 0521112583
- Artikelnr.: 26032891
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
1. Why different, why the same? Explaining effects and non-effects of
modality upon linguistic structure in sign and speech Richard P. Meier;
Part I. Phonological Structure in Signed Languages: 2. Modality differences
in sign language phonology and morphophonemics Diane Brentari; 3. Beads on
a string? Representations of repetition in spoken and signed languages
Rachel Channon; 4. Psycholinguistic investigations of phonological
structure in American Sign Language David P. Corina and Ursula C.
Hildebrandt; 5. Modality-dependent aspects of sign language production:
evidence from slips of the hands and their repairs in German Sign Language
Annette Hohenberger, Daniela Happ and Helen Leuninger; 6. The role of
manually coded English in language development of deaf children Samuel J.
Supalla and Cecile McKee; Part II. Gesture and Iconicity in Sign and
Speech: 7. A modality-free notion of gesture and how it can help us with
the morpheme vs. gesture question in sign language linguistics (or at least
give us some criteria to work with) Arika Okrent; 8. Gesture as the
substrate in the process of ASL grammaticization Terry Janzen and Barbara
Shaffer; 9. A cross-linguistic examination of the lexicons of four signed
languages Anne-Marie Currie, Richard P. Meier and Keith Walters; Part III.
Syntax in Sign: Few or No Effects of Modality: 10. Where are all the
modality effects? Diane Lillo-Martin; 11. Applying morphosyntactic and
phonological readjustment rules in natural language negation Roland Pfau;
12. Nominal expressions in Hong Kong Sign Language: does modality make a
difference? Gladys Tang and Felix Sze; Part IV. Using Space and Describing
Space: 13. Pronominal reference in signed and spoken language: are
grammatical categories modality-dependent? Susan Lloyd McBurney; 14. Is
verb agreement the same cross-modally? Christian Rathmann and Gaurav
Mathur; 15. The effects of modality on spatial language: how signers and
speakers talk about space Karen Emmorey; 16. The effects of modality on BSL
development in an exceptional learner Gary Morgan, Neil Smith, Ianthi
Tsimpli and Bencie Woll; 17. Deictic points in the visual/gestural and
tactile/gestural modalities David Quinto-Pozos.
modality upon linguistic structure in sign and speech Richard P. Meier;
Part I. Phonological Structure in Signed Languages: 2. Modality differences
in sign language phonology and morphophonemics Diane Brentari; 3. Beads on
a string? Representations of repetition in spoken and signed languages
Rachel Channon; 4. Psycholinguistic investigations of phonological
structure in American Sign Language David P. Corina and Ursula C.
Hildebrandt; 5. Modality-dependent aspects of sign language production:
evidence from slips of the hands and their repairs in German Sign Language
Annette Hohenberger, Daniela Happ and Helen Leuninger; 6. The role of
manually coded English in language development of deaf children Samuel J.
Supalla and Cecile McKee; Part II. Gesture and Iconicity in Sign and
Speech: 7. A modality-free notion of gesture and how it can help us with
the morpheme vs. gesture question in sign language linguistics (or at least
give us some criteria to work with) Arika Okrent; 8. Gesture as the
substrate in the process of ASL grammaticization Terry Janzen and Barbara
Shaffer; 9. A cross-linguistic examination of the lexicons of four signed
languages Anne-Marie Currie, Richard P. Meier and Keith Walters; Part III.
Syntax in Sign: Few or No Effects of Modality: 10. Where are all the
modality effects? Diane Lillo-Martin; 11. Applying morphosyntactic and
phonological readjustment rules in natural language negation Roland Pfau;
12. Nominal expressions in Hong Kong Sign Language: does modality make a
difference? Gladys Tang and Felix Sze; Part IV. Using Space and Describing
Space: 13. Pronominal reference in signed and spoken language: are
grammatical categories modality-dependent? Susan Lloyd McBurney; 14. Is
verb agreement the same cross-modally? Christian Rathmann and Gaurav
Mathur; 15. The effects of modality on spatial language: how signers and
speakers talk about space Karen Emmorey; 16. The effects of modality on BSL
development in an exceptional learner Gary Morgan, Neil Smith, Ianthi
Tsimpli and Bencie Woll; 17. Deictic points in the visual/gestural and
tactile/gestural modalities David Quinto-Pozos.
1. Why different, why the same? Explaining effects and non-effects of
modality upon linguistic structure in sign and speech Richard P. Meier;
Part I. Phonological Structure in Signed Languages: 2. Modality differences
in sign language phonology and morphophonemics Diane Brentari; 3. Beads on
a string? Representations of repetition in spoken and signed languages
Rachel Channon; 4. Psycholinguistic investigations of phonological
structure in American Sign Language David P. Corina and Ursula C.
Hildebrandt; 5. Modality-dependent aspects of sign language production:
evidence from slips of the hands and their repairs in German Sign Language
Annette Hohenberger, Daniela Happ and Helen Leuninger; 6. The role of
manually coded English in language development of deaf children Samuel J.
Supalla and Cecile McKee; Part II. Gesture and Iconicity in Sign and
Speech: 7. A modality-free notion of gesture and how it can help us with
the morpheme vs. gesture question in sign language linguistics (or at least
give us some criteria to work with) Arika Okrent; 8. Gesture as the
substrate in the process of ASL grammaticization Terry Janzen and Barbara
Shaffer; 9. A cross-linguistic examination of the lexicons of four signed
languages Anne-Marie Currie, Richard P. Meier and Keith Walters; Part III.
Syntax in Sign: Few or No Effects of Modality: 10. Where are all the
modality effects? Diane Lillo-Martin; 11. Applying morphosyntactic and
phonological readjustment rules in natural language negation Roland Pfau;
12. Nominal expressions in Hong Kong Sign Language: does modality make a
difference? Gladys Tang and Felix Sze; Part IV. Using Space and Describing
Space: 13. Pronominal reference in signed and spoken language: are
grammatical categories modality-dependent? Susan Lloyd McBurney; 14. Is
verb agreement the same cross-modally? Christian Rathmann and Gaurav
Mathur; 15. The effects of modality on spatial language: how signers and
speakers talk about space Karen Emmorey; 16. The effects of modality on BSL
development in an exceptional learner Gary Morgan, Neil Smith, Ianthi
Tsimpli and Bencie Woll; 17. Deictic points in the visual/gestural and
tactile/gestural modalities David Quinto-Pozos.
modality upon linguistic structure in sign and speech Richard P. Meier;
Part I. Phonological Structure in Signed Languages: 2. Modality differences
in sign language phonology and morphophonemics Diane Brentari; 3. Beads on
a string? Representations of repetition in spoken and signed languages
Rachel Channon; 4. Psycholinguistic investigations of phonological
structure in American Sign Language David P. Corina and Ursula C.
Hildebrandt; 5. Modality-dependent aspects of sign language production:
evidence from slips of the hands and their repairs in German Sign Language
Annette Hohenberger, Daniela Happ and Helen Leuninger; 6. The role of
manually coded English in language development of deaf children Samuel J.
Supalla and Cecile McKee; Part II. Gesture and Iconicity in Sign and
Speech: 7. A modality-free notion of gesture and how it can help us with
the morpheme vs. gesture question in sign language linguistics (or at least
give us some criteria to work with) Arika Okrent; 8. Gesture as the
substrate in the process of ASL grammaticization Terry Janzen and Barbara
Shaffer; 9. A cross-linguistic examination of the lexicons of four signed
languages Anne-Marie Currie, Richard P. Meier and Keith Walters; Part III.
Syntax in Sign: Few or No Effects of Modality: 10. Where are all the
modality effects? Diane Lillo-Martin; 11. Applying morphosyntactic and
phonological readjustment rules in natural language negation Roland Pfau;
12. Nominal expressions in Hong Kong Sign Language: does modality make a
difference? Gladys Tang and Felix Sze; Part IV. Using Space and Describing
Space: 13. Pronominal reference in signed and spoken language: are
grammatical categories modality-dependent? Susan Lloyd McBurney; 14. Is
verb agreement the same cross-modally? Christian Rathmann and Gaurav
Mathur; 15. The effects of modality on spatial language: how signers and
speakers talk about space Karen Emmorey; 16. The effects of modality on BSL
development in an exceptional learner Gary Morgan, Neil Smith, Ianthi
Tsimpli and Bencie Woll; 17. Deictic points in the visual/gestural and
tactile/gestural modalities David Quinto-Pozos.