- Database topics
- Communication and Journalism; Language
Database contains abstracts of articles published in the primary professional literature of the communications field.
Database contains abstracts of articles published in the primary professional literature of the communications field.
- Database topics
- Communication and Journalism
- Keyword
- Publications
- Thesaurus
- Author profiles
- Indexes
- Cited references.
- Keyword
- Publications
- Thesaurus
- Author profiles
- Indexes
- Cited references.
- Database topics
- Language; American Literary Studies
- Physical extent
- 1 online resource
Contains more than 450 million words of text equally divided among spoken, fiction, popular magazines, newspapers, and academic texts. It includes 20 million words each year from 1990-2012.
Contains more than 450 million words of text equally divided among spoken, fiction, popular magazines, newspapers, and academic texts. It includes 20 million words each year from 1990-2012.
- Database topics
- Language; American Literary Studies
The largest structured corpus of historical English containing more than 400 million words of text of American English from 1810 to 2009.
The largest structured corpus of historical English containing more than 400 million words of text of American English from 1810 to 2009.
5. Ethnologue [1951 - ]
- Database topics
- Language
- Journal/Periodical
- v. 28 cm.
Green Library
Green Library | Status |
---|---|
Find it Information Center: CDROMs | |
P371 .E83 14TH ED.:CD-ROM | In-library use |
Find it
Information Center: Reference
Latest yr. (or vol.) in INFORMATION CENTER; earlier in STACKS |
|
P371 .E83 15TH ED | In-library use |
Find it
Stacks
|
|
P371 .E83 9TH ED | Unknown |
P371 .E83 10TH ED | Unknown |
P371 .E83 10TH ED. INDEX | Unknown |
P371 .E83 11TH ED | Unknown |
P371 .E83 11TH ED | Unknown |
P371 .E83 11TH ED. INDEX | Unknown |
P371 .E83 12TH ED | Unknown |
P371 .E83 13TH ED | Unknown |
P371 .E83 14TH ED.:V.2 | Unknown |
P371 .E83 14TH ED.:V.1 | Unknown |
- Database topics
- Language
"The . . . system provides a way to perform powerful electronic searches of 60 core serials and annuals in the discipline of communication studies and related fields (e.g., journalism, rhetoric, mass communication, social linguistics)."--orientation page
"The . . . system provides a way to perform powerful electronic searches of 60 core serials and annuals in the discipline of communication studies and related fields (e.g., journalism, rhetoric, mass communication, social linguistics)."--orientation page
- Database topics
- Language
Lexicons of Early Modern English (LEME) is a historical database of monolingual, bilingual, and polyglot dictionaries, lexical encyclopedias, hard-word glossaries, spelling lists, and lexically-valuable treatises surviving in print or manuscript from the Tudor, Stuart, Caroline, Commonwealth, and Restoration periods. Texts of word-entries whose headword (source) or explanation (target) language is English tell what speakers of English thought about their tongue in the period served by the Short-title and Wing catalogues, from the advent of printing to about 1700. Their lexical insights, which may at times seem misguided, shaped the history of our living tongue. Any contemporary's testimony about the meaning of his own words has an undeniable authority. For this reason, LEME is not a period dictionary like The Middle English Dictionary or the yet unrealized Early Modern English period dictionary. The scholar who proposed the latter, Charles C. Fries, would have recognized LEME to be a source of "contemporary comments" that illustrate word usage. What Fries could not have imagined eighty years ago was a technology that would store all these quotations as distinct word-entries and have the potential to list them, alphabetically by lemmatized headword, and then chronologically by lexicon date. LEME incorporates some of what he hoped to create.
Lexicons of Early Modern English (LEME) is a historical database of monolingual, bilingual, and polyglot dictionaries, lexical encyclopedias, hard-word glossaries, spelling lists, and lexically-valuable treatises surviving in print or manuscript from the Tudor, Stuart, Caroline, Commonwealth, and Restoration periods. Texts of word-entries whose headword (source) or explanation (target) language is English tell what speakers of English thought about their tongue in the period served by the Short-title and Wing catalogues, from the advent of printing to about 1700. Their lexical insights, which may at times seem misguided, shaped the history of our living tongue. Any contemporary's testimony about the meaning of his own words has an undeniable authority. For this reason, LEME is not a period dictionary like The Middle English Dictionary or the yet unrealized Early Modern English period dictionary. The scholar who proposed the latter, Charles C. Fries, would have recognized LEME to be a source of "contemporary comments" that illustrate word usage. What Fries could not have imagined eighty years ago was a technology that would store all these quotations as distinct word-entries and have the potential to list them, alphabetically by lemmatized headword, and then chronologically by lexicon date. LEME incorporates some of what he hoped to create.
- Database topics
- Communication and Journalism
- Physical extent
- 1 online resource
Offers peer-reviewed annotated bibliographies on the study of communication as a multidisciplinary effort to understand the constant, varied, and complex transmission and exchange of information, knowledge, and ideas. Bibliographies are browseable by subject area and keyword searchable. Contains a "My OBO" function that allows users to create personalized bibliographies of individual citations from different bibliographies.
Offers peer-reviewed annotated bibliographies on the study of communication as a multidisciplinary effort to understand the constant, varied, and complex transmission and exchange of information, knowledge, and ideas. Bibliographies are browseable by subject area and keyword searchable. Contains a "My OBO" function that allows users to create personalized bibliographies of individual citations from different bibliographies.