Search results for " Languages"
showing 10 items of 1859 documents
The genomic history of the Aegean palatial civilizations
2021
Summary The Cycladic, the Minoan, and the Helladic (Mycenaean) cultures define the Bronze Age (BA) of Greece. Urbanism, complex social structures, craft and agricultural specialization, and the earliest forms of writing characterize this iconic period. We sequenced six Early to Middle BA whole genomes, along with 11 mitochondrial genomes, sampled from the three BA cultures of the Aegean Sea. The Early BA (EBA) genomes are homogeneous and derive most of their ancestry from Neolithic Aegeans, contrary to earlier hypotheses that the Neolithic-EBA cultural transition was due to massive population turnover. EBA Aegeans were shaped by relatively small-scale migration from East of the Aegean, as e…
Bǝjŋǝlwǝ ulguril
1935
Krievu rakstnieka stāstu par dzīvniekiem tulkojums evenku valodā.
Personu vārdi Bībeles tulkojumos latviešu valodā
1999
Advisor: Jānis Rozenbergs
Baltic Journal of English Language, Literature a Culture, Volume 7
2017
Coñece-lo mundo baixomedieval hispánico a través dos seus refráns: Los refranes que dizen las viejas tras el fuego
2011
O obxectivo do presente artigo é destacar brevemente algúns aspectos socioculturais, políticos e económicos da baixa Idade Media do reino de Castela (e, por extensión, nalgúns casos, dos restantes reinos cristiáns peninsulares), extraíbles da fosilización formal de enunciados pluriverbais que coñecemos como refráns. Baséase, primeiro, na consideración do refrán como reflexo, en maior ou menor medida, da sociedade do seu tempo (e tamén de épocas anteriores) e, segundo, como depositario non só do saber tradicional que se transmite de xeración en xeración, senón tamén da cultura socioeconómica, material e ambiental de épocas pretéritas. Para iso emprégase como corpus textual os Refranes que di…
LETTER TO THE EDITOR. CUNICULUS 'RABBIT' - A CELTIC ETYMOLOGY
2010
Den kultur- och litteraturhistoriska gestalten i den lettiska novellen “Svētā Briģita” (“Heliga Birgitta”) av Jānis Ezeriņš
2019
Cultural-historical and literary gestalt in the Latvian short story “Saint Birgitta” (“Heliga Birgitta”) by Jānis EzeriņšThe Latvian author Jānis Ezeriņš’s (1891–1924) literary heritage includes, among other texts, the collection of short stories Fantastiska novele un citas (Fantastic short story and others, 1923). The collection contains the short story “Svētā Briģita” (“Saint Birgitta”), in which the author has used the image of a saint, which is very well known in the history of culture, literature and religion. The image can be related both to Celtic mythology and the historical Swedish personality, who had been the founder of Vadstena monastery and a literary author herself (approx. 13…
Adding symbolic information to picture models: definitions and properties
2005
AbstractIn the paper we propose extensions of some picture models, such as colored, drawn and pixel pictures. Such extensions are conceived by observing that a picture may embed more information than the shape, such as colors, labels, etc., which can be represented by a symbol from an alphabet and can be associated to segments, points or pixels. New interesting issues derived from the introduction of symbols will be investigated together with some complexity and decidability questions for the proposed extensions.
Pseudocomplements in sum-ordered partial semirings
2007
We study a particular way of introducing pseudocomplementation in ordered semigroups with zero, and characterise the class of those pseudocomplemented semigroups, termed g-semigroups here, that admit a Glivenko type theorem (the pseudocomplements form a Boolean algebra). Some further results are obtained for g-semirings – those sum-ordered partially additive semirings whose multiplicative part is a g-semigroup. In particular, we introduce the notion of a partial Stone semiring and show that several well-known elementary characteristics of Stone algebras have analogues for such semirings.
On a class of languages with holonomic generating functions
2017
We define a class of languages (RCM) obtained by considering Regular languages, linear Constraints on the number of occurrences of symbols and Morphisms. The class RCM presents some interesting closure properties, and contains languages with holonomic generating functions. As a matter of fact, RCM is related to one-way 1-reversal bounded k-counter machines and also to Parikh automata on letters. Indeed, RCM is contained in L-NFCM but not in L-DFCM, and strictly includes L-CPA. We conjecture that L-DFCM subset of RCM