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Lista de candidatos sometidos a examen:
1) variants (*)
(*) Términos presentes en el nuestro glosario de lingüística

1) Candidate: variants


Is in goldstandard

1
paper CL_LiteraturayLingüísticatxt398 - : In this study, data on the phonetic and diatopic variation of /b/ phoneme produced by Chilean professionals is presented. The results showed five variants of /b/, although only three were statistically significant: [b], [β] y [ [art11-u .jpg] ]. Of these three, the plosive variant [b]was the most stable. The bilabial approximant [β[T]] predominates across the country followed by the labiodental approximant [ [art11-u.jpg] ]. These results also suggest a dialectal variation of the labiodentalism between northen and center areas, and between southern and southernmost zones.

2
paper CO_Lenguajetxt154 - : The processes of spirantization and elision of /d̪/ have been recurrent in the history of Spanish and they have been studied in its geographical, social and stylistic dispersion. Hispanic dialectology and sociolinguistics have revealed three variants in intervocalic and final contexts: approximants [ð], [^ð] and elision [Ø] . The majority of these works are based on atlas cartography, on the impressionistic selection or on spectrographic data. In this paper the results of an experiment on automation will be presented from a experimental test in six informants from Medellin, in order to define the acoustic nature of the variant of /d̪/ intervocalic. The projection of a 9 acoustic measurements matrix to a two-dimensional representation using the t-SNE technique is analyzed in order to observe possible groupings in the variants and their automatic classification. The aim is to investigate viable and efficient strategies from computational linguistics in sociolinguistic studies of phonological

3
paper CO_Íkalatxt260 - : The discrepancies in meaning between (1w) and (1s) can be explained as follows. Can and it is possible are two ways of expressing inclination, but can is also used to express obligation at a low value. Inclination includes two variants: potentiality and ability . The meaning in (1w) is clearly more inclined towards potentiality (not to low-value obligation) as confirmed by the surrounding lexical context (the right is unlimited, …do everything there). The meaning in (1s), on the other hand, places more emphasis on obligation at a low value, also as reinforced by the lexical context (reflects a individual conception, anything that they want).

4
paper corpusRLAtxt204 - : THE VARIANTS OF FIJO AS EPISTEMIC MARKS IN SPANISH: DIACHRONIC STUDY OF ITS DISTRIBUTION AND USE

5
paper corpusRLAtxt147 - : VARIANTS AND FUNCTIONAL EQUIVALENTS OF AL FINAL: THE REFORMULATORS OF RECAPITULATION IN THE SANTIAGO, CHILE SPEECH

6
paper corpusSignostxt598 - : s are followed by infinitives without to, for example, he should stay; modal verbs affect the entire propositional content of the clause in which they appear, for example, ‘could’ [he try]; from a dialectal perspective, more than one modal verb may be given together, as is the case with some variants from the north of England and Scotland, where we can find cases of double modal verbs, for example, “So I say - you won't can read it lass” (example taken from ^[83]Tagliamonte, 2013: 24 ); and as operators, modal verbs share a set of properties known by the NICE acronym, namely modals can be negated by the use of ‘n't/not’, modals can perform subject-verb inversion, for example, ‘Would you please help me?’, modals support propositional content elision, that is, they have a coda function, as in A. ‘Can you come with me?’ and B. ‘Of course I can’, and modals can be used in matters of emphatic polarity, for example, ‘Yes, you can!’

Evaluando al candidato variants:


2) modals: 4
3) modal: 4 (*)
4) obligation: 3 (*)
6) verbs: 3 (*)
9) elision: 3

variants
Lengua: eng
Frec: 101
Docs: 74
Nombre propio: / 101 = 0%
Coocurrencias con glosario: 3
Puntaje: 3.674 = (3 + (1+4.16992500144231) / (1+6.6724253419715)));
Candidato aceptado

Referencias bibliográficas encontradas sobre cada término

(Que existan referencias dedicadas a un término es también indicio de terminologicidad.)
variants
: 8. Resnick, Melvin. 1975. Phonological variants and dialect identification in Latin American Spanish. The Hague: Mouton.
: Amici, S., Gorno-Tempini, M. L., Ogar, J. M., Dronkers, N. F. & Miller, B. L. (2006). An overview on primary progressive aphasia and its variants. Behavioural Neurology, 17(2), 77-87.
: Kraan, C., Stolwyk, R. J. & Testa, R. (2013). The abilities associated with verbal fluency performance in a young, healthy population are multifactorial and differ across fluency variants. Applied Neuropsychology: Adult, 20, 159-168.
: Miguel Franco, Ruth y Sánchez-Prieto Borja, Pedro. (2016). CODEA: A "Primary" Corpus of Spanish Historical Documents. Variants. The Journal of the European Society for Textual Scholarship. 12-13, pp. 211-228.
: Sajjadi, S. A., Sheikh-Bahaei, N., Cross, J., Gillard, J. H., Scoffings, D. & Nestor, P. J. (2017). Can MRI visual assessment differentiate the variants of primary-progressive aphasia? American Journal of Neuroradiology, 38(5), 954-960.