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In this sense, discourse analysis is, like descriptive linguistics, a way of studying language.
Descriptive linguistics has, however, a long and established tradition of transcription.
Almost all linguistic theory has its origin in practical problems of descriptive linguistics.
The design of language: An introduction to descriptive linguistics.
This is crucial for research in descriptive linguistics: when studying a new language, how are we to note the pronunciation of different words?
Descriptive linguistics typically avoids using these negative terms, since from a scientific point of view such changes are neither good nor bad.
Modern descriptive linguistics is based on a structural approach to language, as exemplified in the work of Bloomfield and others.
Modern researchers in syntax attempt to descriptive linguistics in terms of such rules.
In trying to determine such regularities, the discourse analyst will typically adopt the traditional methodology of descriptive linguistics.
This olympiad furthers the fields of mathematical, theoretical, and descriptive linguistics.
SSGL is mainly devoted to the field of descriptive linguistics.
Documentary and descriptive linguistics.
Once he introduces them, the linguist cannot simply retreat into claiming that he is only dealing with the abstractions of descriptive linguistics.
His text "Introduction to Descriptive Linguistics" (with an accompanying workbook)
Descriptive linguistics ain't simple.
Deep Linguistic Processing is a natural language processing framework which draws on theoretical and descriptive linguistics.
Courses are currently offered in such areas as macro-sociolinguistics, multilingual education, language survey, translation, descriptive linguistics, and language documentation.
Descriptive linguistics, and the related structuralism movement caused linguistics to focus on how language changes over time, instead of just describing the differences between languages.
He called this approach "typological classification", arrived at by descriptive linguistics rather than by comparative linguistics.
"The inefficiency of 'tone change' in Sino-Tibetan descriptive linguistics."
A linguistic description is considered descriptively adequate if it achieves one or more of the following goals of descriptive linguistics:
Descriptive linguistics in America: Triviality vs. irrelevance, (Word 20.197-206, 1964)
"Descriptive Linguistics and the Ethnomusicologist."
One was 'continuing descriptive Linguistics beyond the limits of a single sentence at a time'(Harris 1952 [1964:356]).
The very idea of "proper" pronunciation of Cantonese is very controversial, since there is no such a thing as "mispronunciation" in descriptive linguistics.