Jakobson


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Related to Jakobson: Roman Jakobson
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Synonyms for Jakobson

United States linguist (born in Russia) noted for his description of the universals of phonology (1896-1982)

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
En el mundo, se estiman 500 especies incluidas en 11 generos: Chlamisus Rafinesque, Fulcidax Voet, Carcinobaena Lacordaire, Exema Lacordaire, Hymetes Lacordaire, Pseudochlamys Lacordaire, Diplacaspis Jakobson, Melittochlamys Monros, Aulacochlamys Monros, Neochlamisus Karren y Kakita Chamorro-Lacayo & Konstantinov (Chamorro-Lacayo & Konstantinov, 2009).
One as Paul van Tieghem's (1871-1948) model of transnational communication, while the other was Roman Jakobson's (1896-1982) model of speech communication.
Having spent his formative years in Manchester - the cultural heartland of UK rave history - Jakobson graduated business school and began DJing the Manchester circuit and producing guaranteed floor-fillers from his bedroom.
For the next three decades, Jakobson Ramin, an investigative journalist based in California, learnt to live with chronic lower back pain, developing sciatica during her first and second pregnancies.
Pour le linguiste Jakobson (1963 [1956]: 48), le locuteur produit un message en selectionnant des mots [retrait] dans un repertoire lexical et en les combinant [introduction] dans des phrases.
Jakobson identifies the reference to the Bronze Horseman in the semantically loaded word "not made by hands" (nerukotvornyi), arguing that Pushkin employs it in parody of V.
Carl Robert Jakobson played an important role in the formation of which European country?
Noting Jacques Lacan's (1901-81) famous motto of a "return to Freud," Tomsic argues that in the late 1960s, the French psychiatrist initiated a second return to Freud, in which the reference to structural linguistics (particularly Saussure and Jakobson) was supplemented with Marx's critique of political economy.
In the course of their investigation (which is overseen by the highest levels of the French government), the cynical middle-aged cop and the hesitant young researcher encounter a long list of (in) famous characters, such as Louis Althusser, Helene Cixous, Gilles Deleuze, Umberto Eco, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Julia Kristeva, Jacques Lacan, Bernard-Henri Levy, Philippe Sollers, Tzvetan Todorov, and Roman Jakobson (whose "six communication functions" provide the motive for murder and the basis for the novel's title).
Writing about this topic for a Festschrift to celebrate Professor Pavol Stekauer, it seems appropriate to focus on a significant work from the history of linguistics, which itself was presented as a Festschrift contribution, namely Roman Jakobson's famous article Signe zero published in 1939 in Melanges de linguistique offerts a Charles Bally.
My discussion and exploration of the socio-cultural functions of communication and their relationship with dance and performance are based on the work of Edward Sapir, Margaret Mead, Claude Levi-Strauss, Roman Jakobson, and Umberto Eco who approached communication as a cultural phenomenon within systems of messages or signs with language as the "system of reference and linguistics the fundamental method of investigation" (Winkin 106; see also Birdwhistell; Sapir).