But I also don't want to toss out controlled vocabularies, or expert assignment of categories. |
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It involves comparison to reconstruct, if you like, the ancient vocabularies that present-day languages are derived from. |
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And what is more, even he concedes that I am right to say that none of the vocabularies record a term corresponding to the English word for land. |
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This is why communities of practice adopt formal vocabularies, so that ambiguity can be reduced and clarity improved. |
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The dialogue participates in this uneasy sense of dislocation, being composed of vocabularies that effect various degrees of depersonalisation. |
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While these languages shared phonology and grammar, they had entirely different vocabularies. |
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Mixing ballet, modern, and colloquial dance vocabularies, he produces works with a lot of surface appeal. |
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The paper considers similarities and differences between names in Hebrew and Arabic as a specific lexical group within their vocabularies. |
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This at least seems true in the limited sense that all human tribes, classes and even professions instinctively create their own vocabularies, phrases and even syntax. |
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The rich polysemic nature of Kanak languages, some intricately entwined with Polynesian vocabularies, testify to these congruences of aquatic and terrestrial meaning. |
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In this case, the youngsters share an interest in growing abnormally large vocabularies, though the mechanics of spelling often outpace comprehension. |
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This includes the development of the ISO19115 marine community profile for metadata and work on developing common vocabularies and ontologies. |
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The choreography was advanced for its day, drawing on the modern-dance and ballet vocabularies of the concert stage as well as on the usual jazz and tap genres. |
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Except for Brazil, they all speak the same Spanish language, but with very different pronunciations and, sometimes, vocabularies. |
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If Washoe and her successors can learn a complex and arbitrary vocabulary of gestures from people, do they have such vocabularies naturally? |
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Predictably this spurred them to read more books and improved their vocabularies. |
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Other children have a history of speech and language difficulties and may have smaller vocabularies and less mature grammar than their peers. |
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It follows that to exercise our mental powers fully and to enhance our understanding of life, we should expand and sharpen our vocabularies. |
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We are looking for theories and vocabularies for the process of European integration, for dangers and challenges. |
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There are four of them, poor things, and they don't even know their vocabularies for the first reader. |
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There are few among us whose vocabularies could not be improved by occasionally browsing through a dictionary. |
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The approaches to this difficult topic and the vocabularies used are appropriate to the various age groups for whom the stories are written. |
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And organizations will need to consider whether to work with their competitors to develop common XML vocabularies. |
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Values for this element should be drawn from controlled vocabularies where possible. |
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Life is too short for brooding about the vocabularies of strangers. |
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Reflecting the rivalrous aspirations of a tumultuous, multilayered and multicultural society, it voices itself in a multitude of apparently incongruous vocabularies of form. |
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Many aspects of museum Web sites require visitors to understand the specialized terminologies and controlled vocabularies used by museum professionals. |
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Sadly, it appears the production of literature in business and Government is considered a lowly task to be given to the semi-literate with poor vocabularies. |
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Just as the vocabulary of a language changes from age to age, so the vocabularies of different languages are distinct in their systems, uses, and references. |
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As the subject matter becomes increasingly broad, non-technical, and abstract, descriptive vocabularies vary and sources become scattered and diffuse. |
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Ex-Tampa families will soon have Strine accents and vocabularies. |
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On interoperability in e-government, Member States identified various issues as very important, examples cited included common citizen identifiers, e-authentication and data vocabularies. |
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The knowledge base uses standardized drug, disease, and generic vocabularies and is linked to existing databases. |
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To increase their students' sight vocabularies so they can recognize a large proportion of the words in print, teachers need to focus their instruction and practice on the most commonly used words in the language. |
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Core Components a common set of semantic building blocks that represent the general types of business data in use and provide for the creation of new, and the restructuring of existing business vocabularies. |
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Native speakers' vocabularies also vary widely within a language, and are dependent on the level of the speaker's education. |
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Some learner's dictionaries have developed defining vocabularies which contain only most common and basic words. |
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Over the years, the Bureau has published over 600 glossaries and vocabularies listing terms specific to the various activities areas of the departments. |
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The lexicon of a pidgin is usually small and drawn from the vocabularies of its speakers, in varying proportions. |
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Controlled vocabularies, including thesauri, flat lists of preferred terms and value sets or additional standardized lists may be registered if deemed to be of use within the Government of Canada context. |
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Clearly, the better alternative is to have a common structure and compatible domain-specific vocabularies with a single or federated public registry of the vocabularies. |
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The first brief code vocabularies, called nomenclators, were gradually expanded and became the mainstay well into the 20th century for diplomatic communications of nearly all European governments. |
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Based on a synthesis of Latin, French, German, and English vocabularies, with a greatly simplified grammar, Interlingua was intended for use as an international auxiliary language. |
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This includes creating orthographies and vocabularies from spoken Nahuatl and Yucatec Maya. |
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Such approaches tend to employ the structural rigours of logic rather than the looser syntaxes, grammars, and vocabularies of common languages, with their symbolic, poetic, and inferential aspects of meaning. |
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Searchers use controlled vocabularies by selecting terms from a thesaurus or list of preferred terms, then searching websites or databases for those terms that suit their information needs. |
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I hardly ever study the schoolbook vocabularies. |
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Global new vocabularies can be found from vernacular houses to large scale urban developments, in local communities or even in ecumenopoleis. |
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Will I need to publish glossaries or vocabularies from my database? |
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Furthermore, the meanings of many words have been changed and new vocabularies have been introduced from the vernacular. |
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Many Surrealist artists continued to explore their vocabularies, including Magritte. |
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As new words are added to the vocabularies of languages around the world, it looks like the modest but unmistakable effect of the QWERTY keyboard is set to increase. |
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There is nothing new or progressive in the politically corrected vocabularies that now amuse the prejudiced. |
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These low-cost, high-quality spellcheckers let you add European languages as well as legal and medical vocabularies to your existing spellcheckers. |
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Cultures around the world have rich vocabularies related to birds. |
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Once the reading and writing vocabularies start to develop, through questions and education, the child starts to discover the anomalies and irregularities of language. |
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According to Rorty ironists strive to criticise vocabularies that are considered final, because they constantly doubt the validity of their own final vocabularies. |
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