- Oct 2024
-
catholicsaintmedals.com catholicsaintmedals.com
-
St. Francis de Sales is the patron saint of deaf individuals. He is also the patron of journalists and writers because of his many written religious works. Because of these publications, he is depicted with a book in the left hand and a quill pen in the right. His feast day is January 24th.
-
- Oct 2023
-
en.wikipedia.org en.wikipedia.org
- Mar 2023
-
agate.academy agate.academy
-
Altfranzösisches etymologisches Wörterbuch : AGATE
I recall that the Oxford English Dictionary was also compiled using a slip box method of sorts, and more interestingly it was a group effort.
Similarly Wordnik is using Hypothes.is to recreate these sorts of patterns for collecting words in context on digital cards.
Many encyclopedias followed this pattern as did Adler's Syntopicon.
-
- Oct 2022
-
agate.academy agate.academy
-
PD Dr. Thomas Städtler (Project Leader)
-
All materials available will be evaluated: Dictionaries, glossaries, and texts of a literary and non-literary nature. The slip box presently contains 1.5 million slips referring to 12 million references; the slips are supplemented by means of digital material.
Dictionnaire étymologique de l’ancien français (DEAF) is a dictionary built out of a slip box containing 1.5 million slipswith over 12 million references.
-
- May 2022
-
openeducationalberta.ca openeducationalberta.ca
-
Check out the WUN Presentation related to this topic here: https://youtu.be/EzrXljVmKK8
-
- May 2020
-
blogs.bmj.com blogs.bmj.com
-
Grote, H. & Izagaren, F. (2020 May 7). Covid-19: The communication needs of D/deaf healthcare workers and patients are being forgotten. The BMJ. https://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2020/05/07/push-universal-mask-wearing-communication-needs-deaf-forgotten/
-
- Jul 2017
-
www.musikexpress.de www.musikexpress.de
-
- Feb 2017
-
static1.squarespace.com static1.squarespace.com
-
narrow conception which we have of it; and therefore are wholly confined to the knowledge and use of words:
From what I remember in History of English Language, language has been defined more broadly since Sheridan's day, if language was really strictly defined to words. I think language is now considered as a system of intentional, conventional signs. Unfortunately, animals and the "melancholy mournings of the turtle" (shoutout to kpolizzi and gilmanhernandez) are not considered language within this definition. This reading and the definition of language from the HOEL textbook by Algeo both heavily emphasized oral-aural communication, so I'm curious about the deaf community's perspective on language. Also I was definitely not expecting to bring up disability as much as I have been; I can try to limit my annotations on that subject.
-