Names for Things

Names for Things
Author: John Macnamara
Publisher: Bradford Books
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1982
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9780262630924

The book is concerned with the child's acquisition of names (by which is meant words that refer to objects - including proper names, common nouns in some uses, and pronouns in some uses). Four chapters in the book's first section, Matters Mainly Psychological, describe empirical observations that explore how a child copes with the fact that many different name-like words can be applied to a single object. A second major section, Matters Mainly Linguistic, contains chapters on phonology, the learning of grammatical categories, the definite and indefinite articles, and the plural. A third section, Matters Mainly Philosophical, focuses entirely on the complex issues of reference and meaning. A final chapter reflects on the implications of the book for developmental psychology.An MIT Press/Bradford Book.

Beyond Names for Things

Beyond Names for Things
Author: Michael Tomasello
Publisher: Psychology Press
Total Pages: 465
Release: 2014-02-25
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1317781813

Most research on children's lexical development has focused on their acquisition of names for concrete objects. This is the first edited volume to focus specifically on how children acquire their early verbs. Verbs are an especially important part of the early lexicon because of the role they play in children's emerging grammatical competence. The contributors to this book investigate: * children's earliest words for actions and events and the cognitive structures that might underlie them, * the possibility that the basic principles of word learning which apply in the case of nouns might also apply in the case of verbs, and the role of linguistic context, especially argument structure, in the acquisition of verbs. A central theme in many of the chapters is the comparison of the processes of noun and verb learning. Several contributors make provocative suggestions for constructing theories of lexical development that encompass the full range of lexical items that children learn and use.

My Father Knows the Names of Things

My Father Knows the Names of Things
Author: Jane Yolen
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 38
Release: 2010-04-27
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 1416948953

Rhyming text depicts a father sharing with his child such things as seven words that all mean blue and the name of every kind of cloud.

The Names of Things

The Names of Things
Author: Susan Brind Morrow
Publisher: Riverhead Books (Hardcover)
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1998
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781573226806

The Names of Things

The Names of Things
Author: David Helwig
Publisher: The Porcupine's Quill
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2006
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0889842868

The Names of Things is a book about a man and a generation. Born to a working-class family in Toronto, David Helwig grew up in the haunted town of Niagara-on-the-Lake long before it became a fashionable summer destination for charter coaches of American tourists. David won a scholarship from General Motors to attend the University of Toronto and launched himself into theatrical productions at Hart House and mingled with such writers as John Robert Colombo, Henry Beissel, Edward Lacey, David Lewis Stein and Edna Paris. After working in summer stock with young actors including Timothy Findley, Gordon Pinsent and Jackie Burroughs, he spent a couple of years in the suburbs of Birkenhead, then moved to Kingston where, in the 1960s he shared the world of little magazines with Tom Marshall and Michael Ondaatje and the world of prisons with the inmates he taught. In the 1970s he worked under John Hirsch at the CBC. He edited books for Oberon Press. He was part of the generation of young Canadian writers who believed they could achieve anything. He also shares a touching account of family life, of learning to be a father. Poetry, some of it never before published, catches the echoes of the life he lived. From childhood during the Second World War to becoming a grandfather at the millennium, this is the story of one man and his connections with the history of Canada in the latter part of the twentieth century.

Why Do Things Have Names?

Why Do Things Have Names?
Author: Jean Paul Mongin
Publisher: Diaphanes
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2020
Genre: Identity (Philosophical concept)
ISBN: 9783035802757

Why is a horse called a horse? and not a giraffe or a flapdoodle? Discover philosophy with Plato!

The Names of Things

The Names of Things
Author: John Colman Wood
Publisher: Ashland Creek Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2012-04-09
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1618220063

Finalist for the 2013 Chautauqua Prize "The writing in The Names of Things is beautiful, hypnotic, and exacting…" — Huffington Post Books "With vivid detail and thoughtful prose, Wood delivers a unique and heartbreaking story of love, loss, and the universal human experience of seeking acceptance." —The Los Angeles Review "Quietly affecting…This is an exciting debut, an author with a distinctive experience and a lovely and powerful voice." — Terrain.org “You seize a bit of life, and life damages you.” The anthropologist’s wife, an artist, didn’t want to follow her husband to the remote desert of northeast Africa to live with camel-herding nomads. But wanting to be with him, she endured the trip, only to fall desperately ill years later with a disease that leaves her husband with more questions than answers. When the anthropologist discovers a deception that shatters his grief and guilt, he begins to reevaluate his love for his wife as well as his friendship with one of the nomads he studied. He returns to Africa to make sense of what happened, traveling into the far reaches of the Chalbi Desert, where he must sift through the layers of his memories and reconcile them with what he now knows. Set in a windswept wilderness menaced by hyenas and lions, The Names of Things weaves together the stories of an anthropologist’s journey into the desert, his firsthand accounts of the nomads' death rituals, and his struggle to find the names of things for which no words exist. Anthropologist John Colman Wood’s debut novel is an exquisite, haunting exploration of the meaning of love and the rituals of grief.

Name of Things

Name of Things
Author: rahimo belga
Publisher:
Total Pages: 24
Release: 2017-10-15
Genre:
ISBN: 9781549976599

Name Of Things learn names of daily use things in english with picture for Kids

A Dictionary of First Names

A Dictionary of First Names
Author: Patrick Hanks
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages:
Release: 2006-07-27
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 0191578541

This Dictionary is part of the Oxford Reference Collection: using sustainable print-on-demand technology to make the acclaimed backlist of the Oxford Reference programme perennially available in hardback format. The fascinating and informative Dictionary of First Names covers over 6,000 names in common use in English, including the very newest names as well as traditional names. From Alice to Zanna and Adam to Zola this book will answer all your questions: it will tell you the age, origin, and meaning of the name, as well as how it has fared in terms of popularity, and who the famous fictional or historical bearers for the name have been. It covers alternative spellings, short forms and pet forms, and masculine and feminine forms, as well as help with pronunciation. The book includes extensive appendices covering names from languages including Scottish, Irish, French, German, Italian, Arabic, and Chinese names. Tables of the most popular names by year and by region are also included. From the traditional to the rare and unconventional, this book will tell you everything you need to know about names.

Names, Natures and Things

Names, Natures and Things
Author: Syed Nomanul Haq
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 300
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9401118981

Jabir ibn Hayyan, for a long time the reigning alchemical authority both in Islam and the Latin West, has exercised numerous generations of scholars. To be sure, it is not only the vexed question of the historical authorship and dating of the grand corpus Jabirianum which poses a serious scholarly challenge; equally challenging is the task of unraveling all those obscure and tantalizing discourses which it contains. This book, which marks the first full-scale study of Jabir ever to be published in the English language, takes up both challenges. The author begins by critically reexamining the historical foundations of the prevalent view that the Jabirian corpus is the work not of an 8th-century individual, but that of several generations of Shi'i authors belonging to the following century and later. Tentatively concluding that this view is problematic, the author, therefore, infers that its methodological implications are also problematic. Thus, developing its own methodological matrix, the book takes up the second challenge, namely that of a substantive analysis and explication of a Jabirian discourse, the Book of Stones. Here explicating Jabir's notions of substance and qualities, analyzing his ontological theory of language and unraveling the metaphysics of his Science of Balance, the author reconstructs the doctrinal context of the Stones and expounds its central theme. He then presents an authoritative critical edition of a substantial selection of the text of the Stones, based on all available manuscripts. This critical edition has been translated in its entirety and is provided with exhaustive commentaries and textual notes -- another pioneering feature of this book: for this is the first English translation of a Jabirian text to emerge in print after a whole century. An outstanding contribution is that it announces and presents an exciting textual discovery: the author has found in the Stones a hitherto unknown Arabic translation of part of Aristotle's Categories. Given that we have so far known of only one other, and possibly later, classical Arabic translation of the Greek text, Haq's discovery gives this book an historical importance.