91 resultados para Linguistic variations
Resumo:
En los últimos años los críticos han dedicado mucha atención a la investigación de las voces conflictivas de la obra dramática de Lope de Vega. Se ha enfatizado en particular el papel subversivo de la lengua, sobre todo desde la perspectiva de la teoría de los actos de habla. Este artículo sobre El perro del hortelano opera dentro de un marco teórico similar para analizar cómo las retóricas poco estables del honor y del amor conducen a una desintegración de estos códigos artificiales linguísticos. Además, sugieren la presencia de una inestabilidad social colectiva más siniestra y más comprometida fuera del escenario. La ironía dramática, que sostiene el encubrimiento y la revelación de la 'verdad' a lo largo de la obra, lleva a un desenlace más liminal que cerrado y, quizás, permite la recuperación de unas voces significativas que penetren más allá del tiempo y la época en que fue escrita la obra.
Resumo:
High time resolution observations of a white-light flare on the active star EQ PegB show evidence of intensity variations with a period of ≈10 s. The period drifts to longer values during the decay phase of the flare. If the oscillation is interpreted as an impulsively-excited, standing-acoustic wave in a flare loop, the period implies a loop length of ≈3.4 Mm and ≈6.8 Mm for the case of the fundamental mode and the second harmonic, respectively. However, the small loop lengths imply a very high modulation depth making the acoustic interpretation unlikely. A more realistic interpretation may be that of a fast-MHD wave, with the modulation of the emission being due to the magnetic field. Alternatively, the variations could be due to a series of reconnection events. The periodic signature may then arise as a result of the lateral separation of individual flare loops or current sheets with oscillatory dynamics (i.e., periodic reconnection).
Resumo:
Nitrogen metabolism was examined in the intertidal seaweeds Fucus vesiculosus, Fucus serratus, Fucus spiralis and Laminaria digitata in a temperate Irish sea lough. Internal NO3- storage, total N content and nitrate reductase activity (NRA) were most affected by ambient NO3-, with highest values in winter, when ambient NO3- was maximum, and declined with NO3- during summer. In all species, NRA was six times higher in winter than in summer, and was markedly higher in Fucus species (e.g. 256 ± 33 nmol NO3- min1 g1 in F. vesiculosus versus 55 ± 17 nmol NO3- min1 g1 in L. digitata). Temperature and light were less important factors for N metabolism, but influenced in situ photosynthesis and respiration rates. NO3- assimilating capacity (calculated from NRA) exceeded N demand (calculated from net photosynthesis rates and C : N ratios) by a factor of 0.7–50.0, yet seaweeds stored significant NO3- (up to 40–86 µmol g1). C : N ratio also increased with height in the intertidal zone (lowest in L. digitata and highest in F. spiralis), indicating that tidal emersion also significantly constrained N metabolism. These results suggest that, in contrast to the tight relationship between N and C metabolism in many microalgae, N and C metabolism could be uncoupled in marine macroalgae, which might be an important adaptation to the intertidal environment.