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Book
Nominal classification in aboriginal Australia
Authors: ---
Year: 1997 Publisher: Amsterdam Benjamins

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Book
Studies on the intersection of text, paratext, and reception : a festschrift in honor of Charles E. Hill
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 9789004446465 9789004433342 9004433341 900444646X Year: 2021 Publisher: Leiden Boston Brill

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Studies on the Intersection of Text, Paratext, and Reception brings together thirteen contributions from leading scholars in the fields of textual criticism, manuscript/paratextual research, and reception history. These fields have tended to operate in isolation, but recent years have seen a rise in valuable research being done at their multiple points of intersection. The contributors to this volume show the potential of such crossover work through, for example, exploring how paratextual features of papyri and minuscules give insight into their text; probing how scribal behaviors illumine textual transmission/restoration, and examining how colometry, inner-biblical references, and early church reading cultures may contribute to understanding canon formation. These essays reflect the contours of the scholarship of Dr. Charles E. Hill, to whom the volume is dedicated

Nominal classification in aboriginal Australia
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 1283280361 9786613280367 9027281939 9789027281937 1556198485 9781556198489 9027230404 9789027230409 9781283280365 6613280364 Year: 1997 Publisher: Amsterdam ; Philadelphia John Benjamins publishing Company

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This volume aims to extend both the range of analyses and the database on nominal classification systems. Previous analyses of nominal classification systems have focused on two areas: the semantics of the classification system and the role of the system in discourse. In many nominal classification systems, there appear to be a significant percentage of nominals with an arbitrary classification. There is a considerable body of literature aimed at elucidating the semantic bases of classification in such systems, thereby reducing the degree of apparent arbitrariness. Contributors to this volume

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