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Using the newest sources, this book reveals the experience of Ottoman Muslim women during World War I.
Offers an in-depth case study of the failure of popular constitution making in Turkey from 2011 to 2013.
İnsanoğlunun bir arada yaşama tecrübesi, toplumsallaşma ve sosyalleşme süreçlerinin belirli kurallar çerçevesinde düzenlenmesini gerektirmiştir. Bu kurallar, yazılı hukuk kurallarından önce, gündelik hayatta işlerliği olan, bireyler arası sınırları ve toplumsal konuların çözümlerini belirleyen sözlü hukuk kurallarıdır. Toplumların genel yapısına göre belirlenip gelişen bu kurallar, toplumda düzen ve güvenliği sağlar. Toplumun ortak değer, inanış ve kabulleriyle şekillenen örf ve âdetler, modern hukukun kaynaklarından biridir. Hukuk, toplumsal düzen işlevini yerine getirirken toplumun pozitif hukuka aykırı olmayan uygulamalarını da dikkate ...
A data-driven exploration of how children's language learning varies across different languages, providing both a theoretical framework and reference. The Wordbank Project examines variability and consistency in children's language learning across different languages and cultures, drawing on Wordbank, an open database with data from more than 75,000 children and twenty-nine languages or dialects. This big data approach makes the book the most comprehensive cross-linguistic analysis to date of early language learning. Moreover, its data-driven picture of which aspects of language learning are consistent across languages suggests constraints on the nature of children's language learning mechanisms. The book provides both a theoretical framework for scholars of language learning, language, and human cognition, and a resource for future research.
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The Young Turk Revolution of 1908 reverberated across the Middle East and Europe and ushered in a new era for the Ottoman Empire. The initial military uprising in the Balkans triggered a constitutional revolution, in which social mobilization and the political aspirations of the Young Turks played a crucial role. The Young Turk Revolution and the Ottoman Empire provides a newanalysis of this process in the Balkans and the Anatolian provinces, outlining the transition from revolutionary euphoria to increasing tensions at local and central levels. Focusing on the compromises, successes and failures in the immediate aftermath of 1908, and based on new primary material and Ottoman-Turkish sources, this book represents an essential contribution to our understanding of late Ottoman and modern Turkey.
This book contains 48 papers presented at the Fourteenth International Conference on Turkish Linguistics, held by Ankara University in August 6-8, 2008. The contributions to this conference cover a wide range of topics in theoretical, descriptive and applied linguistics relating to Turkish and Turkic languages in discussing a great variety of issues related to phonology and phonetics, morphology, syntax and semantics, pragmatics and discourse, language acquisition, language contact, and applied linguistics, as they have been grouped in this volume. Although the main focus of the volume is on Turkish linguistic issues, there are also a number of articles in different modern linguistic frameworks dealing with Turkic languages and Turkish dialects. The book will be appealing to anyone interested in current issues in theoretical linguistics as well as those who are working on Turcology, linguistic typology, contact linguistics, and applied linguistics.
Event Representation in Language and Cognition examines new research into how the mind deals with the experience of events. Empirical research into the cognitive processes involved when people view events and talk about them is still a young field. The chapters by leading experts draw on data from the description of events in spoken and signed languages, first and second language acquisition, co-speech gesture and eye movements during language production, and from non-linguistic categorization and other tasks. The book highlights newly found evidence for how perception, thought, and language constrain each other in the experience of events. It will be of particular interest to linguists, psychologists, and philosophers, as well as to anyone interested in the representation and processing of events.
Mainly rev. papers from an international symposium held Sept. 17-21, 2004 in Berlin.