1461. Reference : MM-1-21-17
Lakoff
| Moerman refers to the work of Burke (1966) on the issue of language in the naming and defining of objects such as tables, chairs, etc. | Punch card
Total : 34,847 item
1461. Reference : MM-1-21-17
| Moerman refers to the work of Burke (1966) on the issue of language in the naming and defining of objects such as tables, chairs, etc. | Punch card
1463. Reference : MM-1-21-20
| Moerman refers to the work of the Slovakian political scientist Deutsch (1953). | Punch card
1464. Reference : MM-1-21-21
| Moerman refers to the work of the British philosopher Peter Winch (1963). | Punch card
1465. Reference : MM-1-21-22
| Moerman refers to the work of the anthropologist Brandon (1967) on the issue of theatre in Thailand and the change from Manohra plays to Chatri plays. | Punch card
1466. Reference : MM-1-21-23
| Moergan refers to the work of the US Japanologist Henderson (1964) on aspects of the Japanese legal system as they relate to society. | Punch card
1467. Reference : MM-1-21-24
| Moerman refers to the work of the linguist Joos (1961), and states his criticisms of many of his tenets, most notably the principles of formal and non-formal grammar to communicate the meaning of language as in the word ‘province’ (changwat). Moerman chooses to transliterate his comments in order that the relevant authorities can understand. | Punch card
1468. Reference : MM-1-21-25
| Moerman refers to Stone's work (1964) on language, law and social issues. | Punch card
1469. Reference : MM-1-21-26
| Moerman refers to the work of the attorney Mellinkoff (1963), who looks at the history of law, movements within the legal profession and the specific meaning of legal terminology. | Punch card
1470. Reference : MM-1-21-27
| Moerman refers to the work of the British poet and literary critic Empson (1930), in which he studies the influence of linguistic context on literature. More specifically, he looks at issues including 1) the ambiguity of the language, 2) the forms of ambiguity, 3) interaction with communication, 4) the standard form of the language, 5) language and psychology and 6) process analysis, and cites examples from the work of William Shakespeare. | Punch card