<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Internationalization and localization / Culture / Western Oceanic languages / Languages / ISO 639-3 / Malasanga language / Pano language / Registration authority / Tok Pisin / ISO 639 / Languages of Papua New Guinea / Linguistics
Date: 2013-03-07 16:44:54
Internationalization and localization
Culture
Western Oceanic languages
Languages
ISO 639-3
Malasanga language
Pano language
Registration authority
Tok Pisin
ISO 639
Languages of Papua New Guinea
Linguistics

Microsoft Word[removed]004_tkv.doc

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www-01.sil.org

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 23,58 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Linguistics / Psycholinguistics / Language / Phonetics / Cognitive science / Origin of language / Cohort model / Pidgin / Phoneme / Tok Pisin / Lexicon / Speech

Psycholinguistics Or what I did in my MSc Natasha Dare This talk 

DocID: 1r6sU - View Document

Reading / Phonics / English spelling reform / Learning / Applied linguistics / Initial Teaching Alphabet / Tok Pisin / Learning to read / Literacy / English Spelling Society

Journal of the Simplified Spelling Society J28, Contents 1. Editorial. Articles

DocID: 1pxR5 - View Document

Damaris Neuhof (Justus-Liebig-University) The Origin and Development of Tok Pisin: What the German Colonial Sources Tell us Even though Pidgin English was widely spoken in the Pacific before the arrival of the German pla

DocID: 1dxyf - View Document

Knowledge / Applied linguistics / Language documentation / Tok Pisin / Endangered language / Language / Interlinear gloss / Machine translation / Natural language processing / Linguistics / Science / Computational linguistics

Machine translation for language preservation Steven BIRD1,2 David CHIANG3 (1) Department of Computing and Information Systems, University of Melbourne (2) Linguistic Data Consortium, University of Pennsylvania (3) Infor

DocID: 1axQv - View Document

Languages of Cape Verde / Creole language / Hawaiian language / English-based creole languages / Hawaii / Derek Bickerton / Tok Pisin / Pidgin / Portuguese language / Linguistics / Sociolinguistics / Languages of the United States

Sarah Roberts (Stanford University) Diachronic development of endemic features in Hawai‘i Creole English: new insights on the role of substrate models Hawai‘i Creole English (HCE) has held an important place in creol

DocID: 1asHR - View Document