Results for query "snow"
File name (modification date), and list of matched lines (preceded by line numbers)
/Vol-8-0700-0799/0019.html, ( May 15 1997)
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line 71: Antonella Gramone itsaj@snow.csv.warwick.ac.uk
/Vol-8-0400-0499/0075.html, ( Apr 8 1997)
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line 63: From: "L. Snow" <lsnow@u.washington.edu>
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line 79: From: "L. Snow" <lsnow@u.washington.edu>
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line 98: Laura Snow
/Vol-8-0400-0499/0055.html, ( Apr 7 1997)
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line 179: Ninio, A. and Snow, C. E. (1996) Pragmatic Development. Colorado:
/Vol-8-0400-0499/0027.html, ( Mar 28 1997)
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line 115: 10:00 Catherine Snow - Harvard University: "Social support for language
/Vol-8-0000-0099/0037.html, ( Mar 11 1997)
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line 352: Eskimo 'snow' and German as the national language of the U.S. I
/Vol-7-1600-1699/0024.html, ( Nov 18 1996)
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line 68: the good old 'words for snow in eskimo' story.
/Vol-2-0200-0299/0035.html, ( Oct 18 1996)
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line 255: There is also a company called Snow Lion that does the most
/Vol-2-0200-0299/0005.html, ( Oct 18 1996)
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line 142: than it would be to label a sign warning against snow banks with
/Vol-2-0000-0099/0071.html, ( Oct 18 1996)
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line 158: words for "snow," widely accepted because apparently plausible, but,
/Vol-7-1200-1299/0085.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 93: > Snow's _Levantine Arabic: Introduction to Pronunciation_, and a
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line 99: not easy to answer. Allow me to point out that Snow's book is not
/Vol-7-1200-1299/0022.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 203: *sneghw- "snow" s^eg~ "snow, ice"
/Vol-7-1200-1299/0020.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 106: Rampton, Suzanne Romaine, Dan Slobin, Bernard Spolsky, Catherine Snow
/Vol-7-1100-1199/0045.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 847: Ninio, Anat, and Catherine E. Snow. Pragmatic development: Essays
/Vol-7-0800-0899/0089.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 441: >say Lappland, where all kinds of words for 'snow' and 'reindeer' and
/Vol-7-0800-0899/0064.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 71: say Lappland, where all kinds of words for 'snow' and 'reindeer' and
/Vol-7-0200-0299/0032.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 81: Barreca, Regina (1991) They Used to Call Me Snow White...But I Drifted:
/Vol-7-0100-0199/0038.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 328: Mary Ann Christison, Snow College
/Vol-7-0000-0099/0089.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 390: Sokolov, Jeffrey L. and Catherine E. Snow (eds.). Handbook of
/Vol-6-1400-1499/0036.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 375: discussions of Eskimo words for snow, of Estonian language policy, and
/Vol-6-1400-1499/0024.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 192: words for 'snow' we had on LINGUIST, in response I believe to a query
/Vol-6-1300-1399/0070.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 196: words for snow in Eskimo; that Natives in Darkest Africa speak in
/Vol-6-1100-1199/0081.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 201: women's language, the universal translator, Eskimo words for `snow', the
/Vol-6-1100-1199/0012.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 68: I know Linguist had extensive conversation about "snow," etc., etc., and
/Vol-6-1000-1099/0047.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 71: >"snow" 20 times and it starts sounding funny. and you can't come up
/Vol-6-0900-0999/0042.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
/Vol-6-0800-0899/0073.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 380: Sokolov, Jeffrey L. and Catherine E. Snow (eds.). Handbook of
/Vol-6-0800-0899/0060.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 54: 1. - Losgar (Red Snow). The place where Feanor burned the ships of the
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line 55: Teleri. los=snow, gar from car = red (Noel 1980:164).
/Vol-6-0800-0899/0005.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
/Vol-6-0600-0699/0111.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 246: Snow Lion: 1500 E. 3rd St. 336.08.35
/Vol-6-0500-0599/0045.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 393: Snow Lion: 1500 E. 3rd St. 336.08.35
/Vol-6-0500-0599/0009.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 38: From: "Tove Skutnabb-Kangas" (TOVESK@snow.ruc.dk)
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line 44: From: "Tove Skutnabb-Kangas" (TOVESK@snow.ruc.dk)
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line 51: email (tovesk@snow.ruc.dk) until mid-June. Here are the comments:
/Vol-6-0400-0499/0071.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 116: "Utterly unlike the snow." He shows from databank evidence
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line 122: interpreting "unlike the snow" as the "myriad cruelties of
/Vol-6-0400-0499/0019.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 146: Neal Stephenson. Snow Crash.
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line 328: SNOW CRASH - Neal Stephenson (1992)
/Vol-6-0300-0399/0043.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 55: different words for snow, the early users of the Sanskrit language
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line 101: pertaining to "eskimo" and "snow". He has referred me to a recent
/Vol-6-0200-0299/0080.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 42: From: "Tove Skutnabb-Kangas" (TOVESK@snow.ruc.dk)
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line 69: From: "Tove Skutnabb-Kangas" (TOVESK@snow.ruc.dk)
/Vol-6-0100-0199/0075.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 75: Beals, D.E. & Snow, C.E. (1994) 'Thunder is when the angels are upstairs
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line 89: Charles Ferguson (1977). Baby talk as a simplified register. In Snow &
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line 157: C. E. Snow, eds.*Handbook of Research in Language Development Using
/Vol-6-0100-0199/0011.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "6.113 Varia: Eskimo snow/Scottish rain,"
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line 126: Previous message: The Linguist List: "6.113 Varia: Eskimo snow/Scottish rain,"
/Vol-6-0100-0199/0010.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="6.113 Varia: Eskimo snow/Scottish rain," -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 6.113 Varia: Eskimo snow/Scottish rain,
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line 9: 6.113 Varia: Eskimo snow/Scottish rain,
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line 24: Subject: 6.113 Varia: Eskimo snow/Scottish rain, Open letter to _Language_, IPA
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line 38: Subject: Eskimo snow and Scottish rain
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line 54: Subject: Eskimo snow and Scottish rain
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line 57: I don't know about Eskimo words for snow, but Scottish Gaelic has a
/Vol-6-0100-0199/0009.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "6.113 Varia: Eskimo snow/Scottish rain,"
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line 107: Next message: The Linguist List: "6.113 Varia: Eskimo snow/Scottish rain,"
/Vol-6-0100-0199/0008.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 189: I rather suspect that the claim is like the wilder "Eskimo snow" claims in
/Vol-6-0000-0099/0080.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "6.82 Fun: Silliness about Eskimo snow"
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line 104: Previous message: The Linguist List: "6.82 Fun: Silliness about Eskimo snow"
/Vol-6-0000-0099/0079.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="6.82 Fun: Silliness about Eskimo snow" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 6.82 Fun: Silliness about Eskimo snow
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line 9: 6.82 Fun: Silliness about Eskimo snow
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line 24: Subject: 6.82 Fun: Silliness about Eskimo snow
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line 39: Subject: Silliness about Eskimo snow
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line 45: Subject: Silliness about Eskimo snow
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line 54: snow.
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line 57: Snowy landscape with him and his mutt shovelling snow
/Vol-6-0000-0099/0078.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "6.82 Fun: Silliness about Eskimo snow"
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line 132: Next message: The Linguist List: "6.82 Fun: Silliness about Eskimo snow"
/Vol-6-0000-0099/0012.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "6.12 Greek and Latin verb agreement, Greek words for snow"
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line 177: Previous message: The Linguist List: "6.12 Greek and Latin verb agreement, Greek words for snow"
/Vol-6-0000-0099/0011.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="6.12 Greek and Latin verb agreement, Greek words for snow" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 6.12 Greek and Latin verb agreement, Greek words for snow
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line 9: 6.12 Greek and Latin verb agreement, Greek words for snow
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line 24: Subject: 6.12 Greek and Latin verb agreement, Greek words for snow
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line 39: Subject: Greek & Latin verb agreement, Greek words for snow
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line 45: Subject: Greek & Latin verb agreement, Greek words for snow
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line 65: snow -- one for falling snow, another for fallen snow. Also not true.
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line 66: Ancient Greek has several words used of snow, but they do not divide the
/Vol-6-0000-0099/0010.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "6.12 Greek and Latin verb agreement, Greek words for snow"
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line 403: Next message: The Linguist List: "6.12 Greek and Latin verb agreement, Greek words for snow"
/Vol-6-0000-0099/0000.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 100: of words for "snow." Nor--and this is the problematic area--can we check
/Vol-5-1400-1499/0046.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1449 Sapir-Whorf, Words for snow"
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line 207: the number of Eskimo words for snow), or that syntax is driving
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line 412: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1449 Sapir-Whorf, Words for snow"
/Vol-5-1400-1499/0045.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="5.1449 Sapir-Whorf, Words for snow" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1449 Sapir-Whorf, Words for snow
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line 9: 5.1449 Sapir-Whorf, Words for snow
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line 24: Subject: 5.1449 Sapir-Whorf, Words for snow
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line 45: Subject: Re: 5.1401 Sum: Snow
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line 54: )Subject: Pseudo-summary: Eskimo Snow
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line 141: Subject: Re: 5.1401 Sum: Snow
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line 146: scholarly community the strange history of "Eskimo words for snow".
/Vol-5-1400-1499/0044.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1449 Sapir-Whorf, Words for snow"
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line 299: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1449 Sapir-Whorf, Words for snow"
/Vol-5-1400-1499/0002.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1401 Sum: Snow"
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line 157: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1401 Sum: Snow"
/Vol-5-1400-1499/0001.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="5.1401 Sum: Snow" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1401 Sum: Snow
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line 9: 5.1401 Sum: Snow
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line 24: Subject: 5.1401 Sum: Snow
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line 39: Subject: Pseudo-summary: Eskimo Snow
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line 44: Subject: Re: 5.1382 Words for snow
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line 50: Subject: Pseudo-summary: Eskimo Snow
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line 53: Eskimo words for snow. The response gladdens me. There seem to be at
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line 57: taken to the idea that there are a myriad Eskimo snow words.
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line 60: have for different kinds of snow. In addition, the ways these languages
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line 61: break up our concept "snow" into different concepts.
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line 68: dozens or even hundreds of words for snow, and he documents examples in
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line 72: sophisticated snow vocabulary at all. That does not seem to be quite
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line 104: not merely about Eskimo and English having different vocabulary for snow.
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line 143: Subject: Re: 5.1382 Words for snow
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line 145: `Miss Smilla's Feeling for Snow' by Peter Hoeg, is a passable whodunit
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line 151: because of her ability to read footprints in the snow, an ability
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line 154: feeling that words distinguishing different kinds of snow and ice are
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line 168: glossed 'fine powder snow' (p.102), `snow flurries' (p.452) and `big
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line 170: suggest that English speakers have a more discerning eye for snow!
/Vol-5-1400-1499/0000.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1401 Sum: Snow"
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line 102: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1401 Sum: Snow"
/Vol-5-1300-1399/0087.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1382 Words for snow"
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line 100: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1382 Words for snow"
/Vol-5-1300-1399/0086.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="5.1382 Words for snow" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1382 Words for snow
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line 9: 5.1382 Words for snow
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line 24: Subject: 5.1382 Words for snow
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line 39: Subject: eskimo words for snow
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line 44: Subject: Re: 5.1358 Words for snow
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line 50: Subject: eskimo words for snow
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line 71: Subject: Re: 5.1358 Words for snow
/Vol-5-1300-1399/0085.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1382 Words for snow"
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line 156: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1382 Words for snow"
/Vol-5-1300-1399/0082.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 54: Subject: Poem (Re: 5.1276 Eskimo "snow")
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line 150: Subject: Poem (Re: 5.1276 Eskimo "snow")
/Vol-5-1300-1399/0062.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1358 Words for snow"
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line 145: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1358 Words for snow"
/Vol-5-1300-1399/0061.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="5.1358 Words for snow" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1358 Words for snow
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line 9: 5.1358 Words for snow
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line 24: Subject: 5.1358 Words for snow
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line 39: Subject: Snow 3 1/2
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line 45: Subject: Snow 3 1/2
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line 61: Whereas English [...] has only one word for _snow_ (or two if
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line 72: English, snow, snow (bank, fort, house, man, -mixed-with-rain, -flake, -
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line 73: storm), slush(snow), (snow)cornice, avalanche, blizzard, dusting,
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line 77: transparent compounds like Neuschnee (`new+snow'), Schneeregen
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line 78: snow+rain') and so on, as well as some words that are only frosty and
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line 79: not very snowy, as well as some that have only to do with snow and
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line 87: Granted not everything white in the listings given is snow, how can we
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line 89: reader why so many snowy words of English do not count as snow, or,
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line 100: primarily to denote some sort of snow formation and feel the word is in
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line 114: slighly melted and frozen snow does it have? Loipe is the kind of
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line 137: specialized words having to do woth snow, rain is another phenomenon
/Vol-5-1300-1399/0060.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1358 Words for snow"
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line 125: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1358 Words for snow"
/Vol-5-1300-1399/0039.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 81: snow blower submarine sandwich subway token succotash
/Vol-5-1300-1399/0026.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 39: Subject: Re: "snow" 1/2
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line 45: Subject: Re: "snow" 1/2
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line 47: About snow . . .
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line 55: Third, as to the question of whether or not sleet is related to snow. I
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line 58: define it as a form of snow (ditto for freezing rain).
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line 79: 'snow' (i.e., snow, slush, blizzard, flurry). I'll leave it to others to
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0093.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1293 Words for snow in Eskimo and English Lgs"
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line 159: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1293 Words for snow in Eskimo and English Lgs"
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0092.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="5.1293 Words for snow in Eskimo and English Lgs" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1293 Words for snow in Eskimo and English Lgs
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line 9: 5.1293 Words for snow in Eskimo and English Lgs
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line 24: Subject: 5.1293 Words for snow in Eskimo and English Lgs
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line 39: Subject: Eskimo words for "snow", "ice", etc.
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line 44: Subject: Eskimo snow in context
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line 49: Subject: English snow words
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line 55: Subject: Eskimo words for "snow", "ice", etc.
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line 60: peculiar about Eskimo words for snow is not the number of lexical items
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line 65: Eskimos talk about snow about as often as a Sahara Tuareg would talk
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line 68: although whatever snow that does fall remains on the ground, an~rd is
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line 71: things as landmarks. Snow (as a ground cover or falling) is really not
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line 74: people live in deep snow, and probably talk about it a lot more!
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line 82: life and death. So Eskimos do have many words for ice, and as for snow,
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line 83: this is a technical terminology, and as for snow, it is entirely based
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line 87: expressions (or if you want "words") for "ice" than for "snow".
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line 102: Subject: Eskimo snow in context
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line 105: of whether there is a general term like 'snow' in Eskimo languages,
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line 122: the Eskimo languages have one word for 'snow' like English or two
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line 124: particular words for kinds of snow.
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line 132: Subject: English snow words
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line 135: which he discusses the various Yup'ik words for snow that have been
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line 137: of 9 or 10 English words for snow and snow-like things. I thought it
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line 139: _primarily_ snow or whether the snow sense is derived, figurative, or
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line 145: 1. snow: A good English word with a respectable pedigree. Means
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line 146: primarily snow.
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line 153: 4. avalanche: This word seems to have referred to snow avalanches from
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line 157: applied to a 'snow-squall,' the word became general in the American
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line 169: a building. Its use to refer to a type of snow formation is merely
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/Vol-5-1200-1299/0091.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1293 Words for snow in Eskimo and English Lgs"
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line 138: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1293 Words for snow in Eskimo and English Lgs"
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0077.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1276 Eskimo "snow""
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line 87: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1276 Eskimo "snow""
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0076.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="5.1276 Eskimo "snow"" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1276 Eskimo "snow"
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line 9: 5.1276 Eskimo "snow"
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line 24: Subject: 5.1276 Eskimo "snow"
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line 39: Subject: Boas on "water" in English and "snow" in Eskimo
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line 44: Subject: Re: 5.1259 Eskimo "snow"
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line 49: Subject: Eskimo 'snow'
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line 54: Subject: Whorf on snow
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line 59: Subject: Eskimo "snow"
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line 64: Subject: Re: 5.1259 Eskimo "snow"
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line 71: Subject: Boas on "water" in English and "snow" in Eskimo
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line 73: Did anybody ever bother to look up what Boas wrote about snow in Eskimo?
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line 87: Another example of the same kind, the words for SNOW in Eskimo, may be
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line 88: given. Here we find one word, _apput_, expressing SNOW ON THE GROUND;
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line 89: another one, _qana_, FALLING SNOW,; a third one, _piqsirpoq_, DRIFTING SNOW,
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line 109: Subject: Re: 5.1259 Eskimo "snow"
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line 116: which are: 1) forms of water falling out of the sky along with 'snow';
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line 131: Subject: Eskimo 'snow'
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line 153: >words...for referring to snow and to related natural phenomena, events, or
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line 167: >about snow or not, are clearly complex constructions):
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line 170: >fine snow/rain particles
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line 173: >(snow) powder
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line 174: >snow bank
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line 175: >snow cornice
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line 176: >snow fort
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line 177: >snow house
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line 178: >snow man
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line 179: >snow-mixed-with-rain?
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line 197: ETYMOLOGICAL LISTING OF SOME YUP'IK 'SNOW' TERMS (from a 1987 lecture
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/Vol-5-1200-1299/0075.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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/Vol-5-1200-1299/0058.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1259 Eskimo "snow""
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line 146: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1259 Eskimo "snow""
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0057.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="5.1259 Eskimo "snow"" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1259 Eskimo "snow"
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line 9: 5.1259 Eskimo "snow"
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line 24: Subject: 5.1259 Eskimo "snow"
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line 39: Subject: Re: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow"
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line 44: Subject: Eskimo snow
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line 50: Subject: Re: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow"
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line 63: 1. snow
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line 67: 5. avalanche (*clearly, as Tony notes in general, going beyond just snow)
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line 69: would make reference to a particular state of snow here)
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line 72: about snow or not, are clearly complex constructions):
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line 75: fine snow/rain particles
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line 78: (snow) powder
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line 79: snow bank
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line 80: snow cornice
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line 81: snow fort
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line 82: snow house
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line 83: snow man
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line 84: snow-mixed-with-rain?
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line 90: 3. kanevvluk 'fine snow/rain particles
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line 91: 4. natquik 'drifting snow/etc'
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line 92: 5. nevluk 'clinging debris/. . . snow, etc.
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line 93: 6. aniu [NS] 'snow on ground'
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line 94: 7. muruaneq 'soft deep snow'
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line 95: 8. qetrar- [NSU] 'for snow to crust'
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line 96: 9. nutaryuk 'fresh snow' [HBC]
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line 97: 10. qanisqineq 'snow floating on water'
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line 98: 11. qengaruk 'snow bank' [Y, HBC]
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line 99: 12. utvak 'snow carved in block'
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/Vol-5-1200-1299/0056.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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/Vol-5-1200-1299/0053.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1252 Eskimo "snow""
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line 115: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1252 Eskimo "snow""
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0052.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="5.1252 Eskimo "snow"" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1252 Eskimo "snow"
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line 9: 5.1252 Eskimo "snow"
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line 24: Subject: 5.1252 Eskimo "snow"
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line 39: Subject: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow": fun and fact (Reply)
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line 44: Subject: Snow and ICE!!
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line 50: Subject: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow": fun and fact (Reply)
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line 53: All of a sudden Eskimo snow talk is in fashion again and references are
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line 89: My conclusion about the present Eskimo snow conversations is that some
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line 99: Subject: Snow and ICE!!
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0051.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1252 Eskimo "snow""
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line 68: It may not be as glamorous as the Eskimo snow word myth, but there
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line 77: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1252 Eskimo "snow""
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0047.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1246 Qs: "Snow", Software, Clitic reduplication,"
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line 179: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1246 Qs: "Snow", Software, Clitic reduplication,"
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0046.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1246 Qs: "Snow", Software, Clitic reduplication,
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line 9: 5.1246 Qs: "Snow", Software, Clitic reduplication,
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line 24: Subject: 5.1246 Qs: "Snow", Software, Clitic reduplication, Cues of emotions
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line 46: Subject: Re: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow"
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line 67: Subject: Re: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow"
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line 69: The returned discussion of "snow" in Eskimo has brought my
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0045.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1246 Qs: "Snow", Software, Clitic reduplication,"
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1244 Qs: Corpus linguistics, Core readings,"snow", L2"
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line 141: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1246 Qs: "Snow", Software, Clitic reduplication,"
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line 142: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1244 Qs: Corpus linguistics, Core readings,"snow", L2"
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0044.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="5.1244 Qs: Corpus linguistics, Core readings,"snow", L2" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1244 Qs: Corpus linguistics, Core readings,"snow", L2
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line 9: 5.1244 Qs: Corpus linguistics, Core readings,"snow", L2
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line 24: Subject: 5.1244 Qs: Corpus linguistics, Core readings,"snow", L2
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line 56: Subject: Re: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow" and research questions
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line 129: Subject: Re: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow" and research questions
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line 134: reflect, the natural world] that discussion of Eskimo words for snow
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line 141: for instance, that in one language there are n words for kinds of snow,
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line 143: and skiers do, but by and large people just call the stuff "snow" and
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line 145: are also n words for snow, but that in this language by and large people
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0043.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1244 Qs: Corpus linguistics, Core readings,"snow", L2"
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line 256: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1244 Qs: Corpus linguistics, Core readings,"snow", L2"
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0040.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 17: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1239 Eskimo "snow""
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line 156: Previous message: The Linguist List: "5.1239 Eskimo "snow""
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0039.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 5: <!-- subject="5.1239 Eskimo "snow"" -->
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line 8: Linguist List Archive: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow"
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line 9: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow"
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line 24: Subject: 5.1239 Eskimo "snow"
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line 39: Subject: Eskimo snow
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line 44: Subject: Re: Eskimo "snow"
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line 49: Subject: 'Snow' lexemes in Yup'ik
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line 55: Subject: Eskimo snow
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line 59: > There is talk again on the Linguist list about the "great Eskimo snow
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line 62: > from an Inuit or Tlingit specialist on just what the snow situation
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line 74: referring to snow and to related natural phenomena, events, or behavior."
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line 86: Subject: Re: Eskimo "snow"
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line 88: In response to David Branner, the point about Eskimo snow words
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line 90: kinds of snow if one wants to BUT that there is supposedly (acc.
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line 92: terms corresponding to our 'snow'. So the example of English having
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line 96: one meaning 'falling snow', the other 'fallen snow', which is exactly
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line 104: Subject: 'Snow' lexemes in Yup'ik
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line 109: >There is talk again on the Linguist list about the "great Eskimo snow
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line 113: >or Tlingit specialist on just what the snow situation really is in these
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line 124: for 'snow' in Eskimo." That motivated me to prepare the appended item.
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line 131: Counting Eskimo words for snow:
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line 133: Lexemes referring to snow and snow-related notions in Steven A. Jacobson's
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line 140: This is a list of lexemes referring to snow and related notions in one
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line 160: number of snow words through the roof very quickly.
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line 170: (a) Are all fifteen lexeme meanings really 'snow'-meanings? That is,
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line 171: do words with these meanings really count for you as words for snow?[2]
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line 192: A. Snow particles
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line 196: qanir- 'to snow'
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line 197: qanunge- 'to snow' [NUN]
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/Vol-5-1200-1299/0038.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 16: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1239 Eskimo "snow""
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line 127: Next message: The Linguist List: "5.1239 Eskimo "snow""
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0031.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 61: Subject: Help: Eskimo words for snow
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line 228: Subject: Help: Eskimo words for snow
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line 230: There is talk again on the Linguist list about the "great Eskimo snow
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line 235: or Tlingit specialist on just what the snow situation really is in these
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0012.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 142: P.S.: I travel by motorcycle. Any one know how deep the snow gets between
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line 144: about snow at all yet? Alternative routes might include I-10 from San
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line 148: suggestions? (They don't make snow chains for motorcycles.)
/Vol-5-1200-1299/0002.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 62: belief that Eskimo has 100 different words for snow). One could add the
/Vol-5-1100-1199/0098.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 53: as amusing as the Eskimo snow words hoax).
/Vol-5-0900-0999/0015.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 193: concrete inanimate objects as "knife" and "snow" to abstract objects
/Vol-5-0800-0899/0070.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 77: Snow, Marjorie Wesche, and Diane Musumeci) A call for papers has
/Vol-5-0800-0899/0054.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 230: (Contrast Snow and Meijer's finding that linguists are
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line 262: Snow, C, and Meijer, G. (1977) On the secondary nature of
/Vol-5-0700-0799/0061.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 45: where it was posted by Tove Skutnabb-Kangas <TOVESK@SNOW.RUC.DK>.
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line 118: TOVESK@SNOW.RUC.DK) or Shelley Taylor (address
/Vol-5-0700-0799/0058.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 83: 100+ words for snow"; and rebutting these myths is a worthy activity.
/Vol-5-0700-0799/0043.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 262: snow, rain, thunder... are linked as 'weather', a 'weather'
/Vol-5-0400-0499/0067.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 1412: ai-ren" (the Snow White and the seven dwarfs). In the Southern
/Vol-4-0900-0999/0018.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 115: that includes Eskimo snow words, the "fact" that African languages
/Vol-4-0700-0799/0014.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 121: Eskimo words for snow?). Also, were phrases like "All Correct" common for that
/Vol-4-0500-0599/0067.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 129: from on of the dozens of Russian words relating to snow.
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line 132: years, and the only word relating to snow that I ever encountered was
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line 136: an incipient myth comparable to the one about Eskimo words for snow?
/Vol-4-0400-0499/0069.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 117: Spittin' Snow
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line 124: exists, it is said to be "spitting, or spittin' snow". Spitting
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line 125: snow is a relatively new term, not appearing in the midwestern
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line 129: snow appears on the autos windshield. When this term became
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line 131: snow" fell out of use. In using this term, it would be correct say,
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line 134: that is to only be used when discussing snow. The worst context
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line 142: longer is spitting snow, rather it is "trying to rain." To use
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line 143: "spittin' snow" in April or May is paramount to "Spittin' rain",
/Vol-4-0000-0099/0008.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 66: Catherine E. Snow, Harvard University
/Vol-3-1000-1015/0005.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 53: wonderful examples, such as Lt.Col. Will B. Snow, who was assigned
/Vol-3-0900-0999/0029.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 150: "Friday's storm buried some Salt Lake areas under 12 inches of snow."
/Vol-3-0600-0699/0095.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 48: Subject: The Great Eskimo Snow Hoax
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line 84: Subject: The Great Eskimo Snow Hoax
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line 87: 'The Great Eskimo Snow Hoax' which appeared in a recent issue of a journal,
/Vol-3-0500-0599/0005.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 167: sign languages, and Eskimo words for snow, etc.
/Vol-3-0100-0199/0071.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 76: where to buffalo = to bully around, to do a snow job on. (Poetic license
/Vol-3-0100-0199/0064.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 126: from Jeff Snow (SNOWJS@HUGSE1.HARVARD.EDU), who recommended Leonard and
/Vol-3-0100-0199/0033.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 66: snow, the folk etymology of "ergative" from Greek "ergon", and
/Vol-3-0000-0099/0087.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 199: Jeffrey L. Sokolov & Catherine E. Snow
/Vol-2-0800-0899/0084.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 87: judging by attestations in the works of C.P.Snow: "Ah. That was
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line 128: > and even in English, judging by attestations in the works of C.P.Snow:
/Vol-2-0800-0899/0069.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 126: and even in English, judging by attestations in the works of C.P.Snow:
/Vol-2-0600-0699/0057.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 132: for camel, snow, etc.) without recognition that the functional linguistic
/Vol-2-0500-0599/0087.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 90: words for snow, this story about Whorf and Sapir is not factually
/Vol-2-0500-0599/0065.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 70: be dragons) - i.e., in winter, there bes snow in the mountains vs
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line 71: last winter, there was snow on the mountain. 2) The conjugation
/Vol-2-0300-0399/0046.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 50: es geyt a regn/shney 'it goes a rain/snow = it's raining/snowing'
/Vol-2-0300-0399/0040.html, ( Oct 16 1996)
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line 77: One might perhaps say that when the rain (snow, etc) bothers people, they need
Summary for query "snow":
GlimpseHTTP
search found 523 matches in 113 files
(Some matches may be to HTML tags which may not be shown.)