2,144 search results for “language and culture of the world” in the Student website
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Beyond Academic Freedom: The Palestinian Condition and the Production of History
Lecture, LUCIS Keynote
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Pragmaticalization or grammaticalization? A multidimensional model of the evolution of pragmatic markers
Lecture, Sociolinguistics & Discourse Studies Series
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Driving Gigs in Oman: Women and Techno-Fixes in the Platform Economy
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
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Jessie SunFaculty of Humanities
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Gijsbert RuttenFaculty of Humanities
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Erika RiccobonFaculty of Humanities
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Michael KerschnerFaculty of Archaeology
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Rhomayda AimahFaculty of Humanities
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Fernanda Korovsky MouraFaculty of Humanities
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Ton HarmsenFaculty of Humanities
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Wim TiggesStudent and Educational Support
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Jurjen DonkersFaculty of Humanities
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Laura MiglioriFaculty of Humanities
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Olf PraamstraFaculty of Humanities
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Rolf BremmerFaculty of Humanities
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What influence did French really have on Dutch?
Just as some people today dislike English influences on the Dutch language, in early modern times people also criticised the Frenchification of Dutch. But to what extent did French actually leave its mark in our language? PhD student Brenda Assendelft made a surprising discovery. PhD defence 24 May.
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Lydia van de FliertFaculty of Archaeology
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government's communicative practice in colonial bureaucracy at the turn of the twentieth century in southern Africa
Lecture, Sociolinguistics & Discourse Studies Series
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Jiang WuFaculty of Humanities
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Michaël PeyrotFaculty of Humanities
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Jo-Hannah PlugFaculty of Archaeology
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Anneke Both-de VriesSocial & Behavioural Sciences
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Sealing and bookkeeping practices in Hittite Anatolia
Lecture, Comparative Indo-European Linguistics (CIEL) Seminars
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Oriol Febrer i VilasecaFaculty of Humanities
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Gabrielle van den BergFaculty of Humanities
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The Historical Topography of Medina: Faith, Power, and Memory in Early Islamic Arabia
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
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Céline ZaepffelFaculty of Humanities
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Surya SuryadiFaculty of Humanities
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Mistaken Identities
Lecture, LUCL Colloquium
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Lettie Dorst: ‘Translation programmes change how we interpret the world’
Associate Professor Lettie Dorst has received a Vidi grant to research how machine translation programmes such as Google Translate and ChatGPT translate words and expressions used metaphorically. This still regularly goes wrong, resulting in far too literal, incorrect and sometimes incomprehensible…
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Luisella CaonFaculty of Humanities
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Why the world is quantum
During the Bachelor Honours Class ‘The world is quantum’, students from various disciplines learned about the rules of nature on the smallest scale: quantum mechanics. What opportunities and dangers do they see for their field of study?
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Liesbeth MinnaardFaculty of Humanities
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Lifeng HanFaculty of Science
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Annachiara RaiaFaculty of Humanities
- Worlds to Discover: Manuscripts from the Muslim World
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Two Dialogic Network lectures by Siavash Rafiee Rad and Keramat Fathinia
Lecture
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Susana ValdezFaculty of Humanities
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Bad Bunny at the Super Bowl: Dissecting Latino power, language and culture
Lecture
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Evelyn BosmaFaculty of Humanities
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Jenny DoetjesFaculty of Humanities
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Maria del Carmen Parafita CoutoFaculty of Humanities
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Secondary school students grapple with Dutch texts: ‘I liked the feminist part best’
University lecturer Olga van Marion invited pupils from Ashram College in Alphen aan den Rijn to take part in a series of Dutch workshops organised at the University. Some the students and workshop leaders reflect on the busy morning.
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Technology and the State: Enlightenment Language Machines, Then and Now
Lecture, Research Seminar Medieval and Early Modern History
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Disentangling ghost segments and number marking in Sengwer nouns
Lecture, This Time for Africa! series
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Anne Sytske KeijserFaculty of Humanities
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Olga LundyshevaFaculty of Humanities
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Jennifer SweridaFaculty of Archaeology
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Between deference and destitution: Requesting relief in Scottish pauper letters, 1750-1910
Lecture, Sociolinguistics & Discourse Studies Series
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Ae Ree NamFaculty of Humanities