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Ethnolinguistics: Analyzing the relationship between culture, thought, and language.
He went to France to study ethnolinguistics.
They aren't in ethnolinguistics, they don't feel the slightest responsibility to language.
In many respects, the scope of interest of ethnolinguistics and linguistic anthropology overlap.
His research interests focus on textology, linguistic axiology, and ethnolinguistics.
Ethnolinguistics looks at the relationship between discourse and language, while linguistic anthropology tends to make more general claims about vocabulary and grammar.
During the 1920s and 1930s these women became well known in the fields of ethnolinguistics, folklore studies, and anthropology.
His main interest for the following period were the theories of evolutionary linguistics, with focus on the Neogrammarian approach, ethnolinguistics and psycholinguistics.
In Studies in Southwestern Ethnolinguistics, ed.
Her main domains of research are onomastics, etymology, semantic reconstruction, dialectology and ethnolinguistics.
Clallam: A study in Coast Salish ethnolinguistics.
Anna Wierzbicka is one of the best-known exponents of ethnolinguistics in English-speaking countries.
Ethnolinguistics & Cultural Concepts: truth, love, hate & war, Cambridge UP.
Ethnolinguistics (sometimes called cultural linguistics) is a field of linguistics which studies the relationship between language and culture, and the way different ethnic groups perceive the world.
In ethnolinguistics, a xenonym is a language name (glossonym) not native to this language, but deriving from a different (foreign) language.
At the same time, though, the growth of ethnolinguistics and sociolinguistics offered a venue for the socially engaged linguistics Sapir had called for four decades earlier.
In General and Amerindian Ethnolinguistics, In Remembrance of Stanley Newman, ed.
Currents in Pacific linguistics: papers on Austronesian languages and ethnolinguistics in honour of George W. Grace, 265-291.
In ethnolinguistics, endonyms and exonyms are the names of ethnic groups and where they live, as identified respectively by the group itself and by outsiders.
The term 'Weltanschauung' is often wrongly attributed to Wilhelm von Humboldt the founder of German ethnolinguistics (see Trabant).
Underhill continues his investigation of the relationship between worldview and lanuage in 'Ethnolinguistics and Cultural Concepts: truth, love, hate & war' (Cambridge UP 2012).
James W. Underhill redefined the term in his Ethnolinguistics and Cultural Concepts: truth, love, hate & war (Cambridge University Press 2012).
In addition, as a result of studies on the grammar of LSV, there has also been research into the psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics and ethnolinguistics of the Deaf community in the country.
The true source of ethnolinguistics and the thinker who contributed most to the debate on the relationship between culture, language and linguistic communities was the German philologist Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767-1835).
Though metaphors can be considered to be 'in' language, Underhill's chapter on French, English and ethnolinguistics demonstrates that we cannot conceive of language or languages in anything other than metaphoric terms.