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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Lisa Stewart

Lisa Stewart

The Gestural Origins of Language - 2 views

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    An interesting slide shows overlay between monkeys' area for mirror neurons and Broca's area in humans
Lisa Stewart

Primate Gesture Center - 0 views

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    Good for some basic definitions but doesn't give links to the actual data they are collecting in their projects.
Lisa Stewart

Amy Chua - Retreat of the 'Tiger Mother' - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    What do you think? Should this be tagged "verbal_abuse"?
Lisa Stewart

Text of President Obama's Tucson Memorial Speech - Political Hotsheet - CBS News - 0 views

  • To the families of those we've lost; to all who called them friends; to the students of this university, the public servants gathered tonight, and the people of Tucson and Arizona:
  • We mourn with you for the fallen. We join you in your grief. And we add our faith to yours that Representative Gabrielle Giffords and the other living victims of this tragedy pull through.
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    Students: I hope you got to see Obama's speech in Tucson on TV or the internet yesterday--this is the text of it. I highlighted the first examples of rhetorical patterning...can you find more? :)
Lisa Stewart

the psycholinguistics of metaphor - 5 views

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    scholarly but short
Lisa Stewart

LSA: About Linguistics - 0 views

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    breaks down sub-fields of linguistics and describes their application, with further reading suggestions
Lisa Stewart

Language Log: May 2005 Archives - 0 views

  • Language Log like list Cristi Laquer at Invented Usage has recently posted "on like usage". She cites a number of blog posts on the various innovative uses of like (the hedge, the quotative and so on), including a Language Log post, and asks "If anyone knows of anything else out there, please let us know!" The classic (non-blog) reference is Muffy Siegel's paper "Like: The Discourse Particle and Semantics" (J. of Semantics 19(1), Feb. 2002). In thinking about other references on our site, I came to three conclusions at almost the same time. There have been quite a few Language Log posts that are relevant to the use of like; it's hard to find them; and none of them summarizes the epic panorama of that protean word's patterns of usage. To start with, here's a reasonably complete list, in chronological order, of Language Log posts relevant to like: It's like, so unfair (Geoff Pullum) Like is, like, not really like if you will (Mark Liberman) Exclusive: God uses "like" as a hedge (Geoff Pullum) Divine ambiguity (Mark Liberman) Grammar critics are, like, annoyed really weird (Mark Liberman) This construction seems that I would never use it (Mark Liberman) Look like a reference problem (Eric Bakovic) Seems like, go, all (Mark Liberman) I'm like, all into this stuff (Arnold Zwicky) I'm starting to get like "this is really interesting" (Mark Liberman) This is, like, such total crap? (Mark Liberman)
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    Has a list of entries on the word "like"
Lisa Stewart

The Argument Against Headphones - NYTimes.com - 4 views

  • According to that report, headphone users who listen to music at high volumes for more than an hour a day risk permanent hearing loss after five years.
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    Be sure to read this--it could affect your ability to acquire the nuances of the English language!
Lisa Stewart

Language Log: Locating the sarcasm bump? - 11 views

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    half-way down the page there is a list of posts by linguists about sarcasm
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