Keyword [Cartographic] Result: 1 - 20 | Page: 1 of 2 |
1. | The Cartographic Technology And Relative Scientific Thought Of Topographic Map In The Tombs Of The Han Dynasty At Mawangdui |
2. | Research The Schema Symbols At The WangGuangyi's Art Works |
3. | The Basic Research On Geographical Literatrue In Ancient China |
4. | On Typing Of Direct And Indirect Questions-with Special Reference To Sentence Final Particles |
5. | Derived Heads Of Cantonese Left Periphery And Cartographic Distributions Of Its Sentence Final Particles |
6. | The Cartographic Approach To The Syntax And Semantics Of Adverb Jiu In Mandarin Chinese |
7. | The Distribution Of Chinese Interrogatives In The Cp Domain:A Cartographic Solution |
8. | A Generative Study Of The Chinese Aspect Marker Qilai |
9. | Reading maps, writing landscapes: Cartographic illustration in Arizona, 1912-1962 |
10. | Old versus new: Cartographic discourse and mapping the Protestant identity in 'Paradise Lost' |
11. | Literary space in a cartographic frame: Miguel de Cervantes, Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz, Jose Donoso, and Witold Gombrowicz |
12. | The visualization of perspective systems and iconology in Duerer's cartographic works: An in-depth analysis using multiple methodological approaches |
13. | Everyday practices in Castile: Towards the cartographic imaginary of Miguel Delibes |
14. | Cannibalism in a cultural context: Cartographic imagery and iconography of the New World indigenous peoples during the Age of Discovery |
15. | The cartography of capitalism: Cartographic evidence for the emergence of the capitalist world -system in early modern Europe |
16. | Cartographic projections: World cinema and the production of place |
17. | Mapping, mobility, and selfhood in nineteenth-century narrative: Sir Richard F. Burton, Herman Melville, and Charles Dickens |
18. | Toward a unified analysis of passives in Japanese: A cartographic minimalist approach |
19. | Ways of seeing.3: Scenarios of the world in the medieval Islamic cartographic imagination |
20. | Mapping more than the world: Shaping the cartographic imagination in late medieval and early modern England (Edmund Spenser, Christopher Saxton, Christopher Marlowe, Sir Walter Ralegh, Andrew Marvell) |
|