Amanote Research

Amanote Research

    RegisterSign In

Contact-Induced Usages of Volitional Moods in East Caucasian Languages

SSRN Electronic Journal
doi 10.2139/ssrn.2727107
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract

Available in full text

Date

January 1, 2016

Authors
Nina Dobrushina
Publisher

Elsevier BV


Related search

The Case for Contact Induced-Change in Heritage Languages

Bilingualism
LinguisticsEducationLanguage
2019English

Contact-Induced Lexical Development in Yupik and Inuit Languages

Etudes / Inuit / Studies
ArtsSocial SciencesHumanities
2006English

The Dissociable Effects of Induced Positive and Negative Moods on Cognitive Flexibility

Scientific Reports
Multidisciplinary
2019English

Current Trends in Caucasian, East European and Inner Asian Linguistics

Current Issues in Linguistic Theory
2003English

Stemming Approaches for East European Languages

Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Computer ScienceTheoretical Computer Science
English

Original Synthetic Article: On the Origin of Salish, Wakashnan, and North Caucasian Languages

International Journal of Modern Anthropology
2010English

Chinese and Caucasian Ocular Topography and Soft Contact Lens Fit

Clinical and Experimental Optometry
OphthalmologyOptometry
2016English

Assessing Volition in Pediatrics: Using the Volitional Questionnaire and the Pediatric Volitional Questionnaire

The Open Journal of Occupational Therapy
2015English

Impact of Erosion Process to Fertility Ofmountain-Chernozem Situating in South-East Slope of Great Caucasian

JOURNAL OF ADVANCES IN NATURAL SCIENCES
2018English

Amanote Research

Note-taking for researchers

Follow Amanote

© 2026 Amaplex Software S.P.R.L. All rights reserved.

Privacy PolicyRefund Policy