You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Matt Pointon spends three days explore the fragments of Byzantium that survive in and around the modern-day city of Istanbul.
An account of Matt Pointon's journey in 2013 from Konotop in Ukraine to Bucharest in Romania visiting places like Chernobyl, Kiev, Odessa, Chisinau, Tiraspol, Iasi and Suceava.
Matt Pointon's first-ever travelogue, the account of a trip to Vietnam and Cambodia in 2001.
A travelogue detailing Matt Pointon's 2014 journeyings around Armenia and Nagorno-Karabagh.
An account of a journey across Georgia and Turkey made in the summer of 2010.
The third volume of Matthew E. Pointon's short stories covering the years 2011 to 2014. This varied collection of tales, arranged in the order in which they were written, has something to capture the imagination of every reader.
The second volume of Matthew E. Pointon's short stories covering the years 2006 to 2010. This varied collection of tales, arranged in the order in which they were written, has something to capture the imagination of every reader.
A travelogue charting two brothers' trip along the A470, the only road that links the north of Wales to its south.
An account of Matt Pointon's 2013 journey to India and the UAE.
This monograph pursues a structural analogy between the availability of an existential interpretation in states and the telicity of events. Focusing on evidence from both verbal and adjectival predicates, it argues that quantization forms the basis of a unified theory of aktionsart and provides a theory in which the availability of an existential interpretation in states is, like the telicity of events, determined compositionally by the predicate and the quantization of its internal argument. Quantization is further argued to reflect the internal temporal constitution of the stages of an individual which is tied to the generation of an existential interpretation. This monograph will be of interest to syntacticians and semanticists who are specifically concerned with compositional approaches to eventualities, and to those who have a more general interest in the role linguistic theory can play in determining core properties of the mind.