PSA for Class XI

PSA for Class XI
Author: Saurabh Priyadarshi & Navin C. Joshi
Publisher: Vikas Publishing House
Total Pages: 389
Release:
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9325982420

PSA For Class XI is a well-planned resource for students and is prepared strictly according to the latest guidelines given by the CBSE (Central Board of Secondary Education). The book comprises five major parts: Qualitative Analysis, Quantitative Analysis, English Comprehensions, Data Interpretation and Passages, and Assessment Zone. It contains examples and exercises, with answers and explanations, based on the examination pattern. The text also includes sections on ‘Let’s Try’ in each chapter to help students develop creative thinking and is a must buy resource for students appearing for the PSA examination. KEY FEATURES • Step-by-step solutions to build an understanding of concepts and theory • Designed in the format provided by the CBSE • All possible types of questions framed according to the examination • Includes solved previous years' question papers along with two Model Test Papers

Signal, Meaning, and Message

Signal, Meaning, and Message
Author: Wallis Hoch Reid
Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing
Total Pages: 446
Release: 2002
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781588112897

This is the second volume of papers on sign-based linguistics to emerge from Columbia School linguistics conferences. One set of articles offers semantic analyses of grammatical features of specific languages: English full-verb inversion; Serbo-Croatian deictic pronouns; English auxiliary "do"; Italian pronouns "egli" and "lui"; the Celtic-influenced use of "on" (e.g., he played a trick "on" me ); a monosemic analysis of the English verb "break." A second set deals with general theoretical issues: a solution to the problem that noun class markers (e.g. Swahili) pose for sign-based linguistics; the appropriateness of statistical tests of significance in text-based analysis; the word or the morpheme as the locus of paradigmatic inflectional change; the radical consequences of Saussure s anti-nomenclaturism for syntactic analysis; the future of minimalist linguistics in a maximalist world. A third set explains phonotactic patterning in terms of ease of articulation: aspirated and unaspirated stop consonants in Urdu; initial consonant clusters in more than two dozen languages. An introduction highlights the theoretical and analytical points of each article and their relation to the Columbia School framework. The collection is relevant to cognitive semanticists and functionalists as well as those working in the sign-based Jakobsonian and Guillaumist frameworks.

Swahili and Sabaki

Swahili and Sabaki
Author: Derek Nurse
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 813
Release: 1993
Genre: Foreign Language Study
ISBN: 0520097750

The Sabaki languages form a major Bantu subgroup and are spoken by 35 million East Africans in Somalia, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, and the Comoro Islands. The authors provide a historical/comparative treatment of Swahili (and other Sabaki languages), an account of the relationship of Swahili to Sabaki and to other Bantu languages, and some data on contemporary Sabaki languages. Data sets, appendices, maps, and figures present essential information on phonology, lexical makeup, and tense/aspect morphology. The final chapter is a synthesis describing the linguistic and historical relationship of the Sabaki dialects to each other and to hypothetical proto-stages.