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Therapeutic discourse: a phenomenological viewHartmann, Barbara Dianna Reed January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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A formal investigation of figurative language /Bailin, Alan. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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The formal grammar of switch-referenceFiner, Daniel L., January 1984 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Massachusetts at Amherst, 1984. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 210-217).
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Indirect reference in German mathematical discourseStroinska, Maria Magdalena January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
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A formal investigation of figurative language /Bailin, Alan. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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The effect of the context in metaphor comprehension.Shinjo, Makiko 01 January 1986 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Linguistic analysis of workplace computer-mediated communicationTausczik, Yla Rebecca 2009 August 1900 (has links)
A variety of linguistic techniques were applied to a real world dataset to understand group dynamics in a small work group. Instant message conversations within a group of 22 individuals in a computational simulation group were collected for 15 months and analyzed linguistically. Communication patterns reveal functional uses of public chat, phases of group work, and individual differences in communication. This research contributed to an understanding of small work-group communication and how to use language to understand group dynamics in computer-mediated communication. / text
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Linguistic features of lying under oath an experimental study of English and French /Dyas, Julie Diane. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2002. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Available also from UMI Company.
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An illustration of the use of the linguistic analysis of knowing, learning, and teaching to examine objectives of baccalaureate programs of nursingLeichsenring, Melba Anna. January 1968 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University, 1968. / Typescript; issued also on microfilm. Includes bibliographical references.
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Compositional entity-level sentiment analysisMoilanen, Karo January 2010 (has links)
This thesis presents a computational text analysis tool called AFFECTiS (Affect Interpretation/Inference System) which focuses on the task of interpreting natural language text based on its subjective, non-factual, affective properties that go beyond the 'traditional' factual, objective dimensions of meaning that have so far been the main focus of Natural Language Processing and Computational Linguistics. The thesis presents a fully compositional uniform wide-coverage computational model of sentiment in text that builds on a number of fundamental compositional sentiment phenomena and processes discovered by detailed linguistic analysis of the behaviour of sentiment across key syntactic constructions in English. Driven by the Principle of Semantic Compositionality, the proposed model breaks sentiment interpretation down into strictly binary combinatory steps each of which explains the polarity of a given sentiment expression as a function of the properties of the sentiment carriers contained in it and the grammatical and semantic context(s) involved. An initial implementation of the proposed compositional sentiment model is de- scribed which attempts direct logical sentiment reasoning rather than basing compu- tational sentiment judgements on indirect data-driven evidence. Together with deep grammatical analysis and large hand-written sentiment lexica, the model is applied recursively to assign sentiment to all (sub )sentential structural constituents and to concurrently equip all individual entity mentions with gradient sentiment scores. The system was evaluated on an extensive multi-level and multi-task evaluation framework encompassing over 119,000 test cases from which detailed empirical ex- perimental evidence is drawn. The results across entity-, phrase-, sentence-, word-, and document-level data sets demonstrate that AFFECTiS is capable of human-like sentiment reasoning and can interpret sentiment in a way that is not only coherent syntactically but also defensible logically - even in the presence of the many am- biguous extralinguistic, paralogical, and mixed sentiment anomalies that so tellingly characterise the challenges involved in non-factual classification.
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