167 resultados para prosody
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Mode of access: Internet.
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The second part (250 p.) has title: An English-French dictionary, designed as the second part to the Boston edition of Boyer's French dictionary, with Tardy's pronunciation.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Edited by William Bentley Fowle.
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[Vol. 2] has t.p.: An English-French dictionary, designed as a second part to the Boston edition of Boyer's French dictionary , with Tardy's pronunciation.
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Vol. 2 has title: An English-French dictionary designed as a second part to the Boston edition of Boyer's French dictionary, with Tardy's pronunciation.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
Rules and exercises in Homeric and Attic Greek : to which is added a short system of Greek prosody /
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Includes indexes.
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v. 1. The accidence and prosody.--v. 2. The syntax &c.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Progress in understanding brain/behavior relationships in adult-acquired dysprosody has led to models of cortical hemispheric representation of prosodic processing based on functional (linguistic vs affective) or physical (timing vs pitch) parameters. These explanatory perspectives have not been reconciled, and also a number of neurobehavior syndromes that include dysprosody among their neurological signs have not yet been integrated. In addition to expanding the functional perspective on prosody, some of these syndromes have implicated a significant role of subcortical nuclei in prosodic competence. In this article, two patients with acquired dysprosodic speech following damage to basal ganglia nuclei were evaluated using behavioral, acoustic, cognitive, and radiographic approaches. Selective quantitative measures were performed on each individual’s performance to provide detailed verification and clarification of clinical observations, and to test hypotheses regarding prosodic function. These studies, combined with a review of related clinical research findings, exemplify the value of a broader perspective on the neurobehavioral dysfunction underlying acquired adult dysprosodic speech, and lead to a new, proposed conceptual framework for the cerebral representation of prosody.