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Keyword [distinction]
Result: 181 - 200 | Page: 10 of 10
181. The origins of lexical-category-to-meaning links: The case of count nouns and proper names
182. 'Towards the temple of fame': Class, the classics, and the struggle for distinction in the poetry of John Keats
183. A philosophical introduction to Norman Maclean by way of Kierkegaard's distinction between fear and anxiety (Soren Kierkegaard)
184. The tacit and the ineffable: Frege and Wittgenstein on the distinction between language as a calculus and language as the universal medium (Gottlob Frege, Ludwig Wittgenstein)
185. The developmental patterns and cognitive predictors of prosocial display rule behavior and understanding: Theory of mind and inhibitory control
186. Kant's Hypothetical Imperative
187. Beyond the Basic/Nonbasic Interests Distinction: A Feminist Approach to Inter-Species Moral Conflict and Moral Repair
188. Distinction in death: An analysis of individuality, sociality, and brand consumption in contemporary American funeral practice
189. An ergative view of Thao syntax (Taiwan, China)
190. John Locke on the resemblance theses and the primary-secondary quality distinction
191. The syntax-discourse interface: Effects of the main-subordinate distinction on attention structure
192. A computational theory of the use-mention distinction in natural language
193. North American Jews in Israel: The cultural distinction and identity of American-Anglo Olim
194. Vox aurea: The role of socio-economic distinction in Statius' 'Silvae' (Roman Empire)
195. A connectionist account of the object-substance distinction in early noun learning
196. Explicit versus implicit grammar in the teaching of the ser/estar distinction in Spanish
197. The Mahayana-Hinayana distinction in the 'Mahayanasutralamkara': A terminological analysis
198. Vagueness in language and law: Blurring the semantics-pragmatics distinction
199. The relationship of sermon form to the communication of the proper distinction between law and Gospel in Lutheran preaching
200. Cognate objects and the argument/adjunct distinction in English
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