Imagined Communities. Reflections on the Origin and Spread
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ABSTRACT of the DISSERTATION Faithful Stress in Paradigms
ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Faithful Stress in Paradigms: Nominal Inflection in Ukrainian and Russian by LUBA BUTSKA Dissertation Director: Hubert Truckenbrodt This dissertation is the first English-language description and analysis of Ukrainian inflectional stress in nouns. The analysis also offers a new way to capture the generalizations of stress in Russian nouns. Ukrainian and Russian nominal inflectional stress patterns fall into three main divisions: Fixed stress; Post-stem stress; and Mobile stress. Fixed stress surfaces on the same stem syllable throughout the entire inflectional paradigm; these stems are specified for stress in the input. I propose a new analysis for Post-stem stressing nouns in terms of faithfulness: these stems are faithful to an absence of stem stress in the input. The characterization of certain stems as lexically marked for stress, and others as not inherently stressed, is one which has a long history in the generative accounts for Russian (cf. Brown et. al. 1996, Halle 1973, 1997, Halle and Idsardi 1995, Idsardi 1992, Melvold 1986, 1990, Stankiewicz 1986, 1993). But whereas accounts of Russian usually specify a special rule or constraint requiring stress to arise on ii Post-stem syllable, the proposal here is that faithfulness to that lack of stem stress drives the Post-stem pattern. Mobile stress is the final pattern in Ukrainian and Russian nominal inflection. I maintain the two-way distinction of underlying stress (i.e. presence and absence) by looking carefully at the whole paradigm of a Ukrainian nominal stem. I show that a particular member of the paradigm always triggers Mobile stress, and that Mobile stems therefore need not be specially marked in Ukrainian, as they have been in Russian. -
Port of Cirebon Development Plan Fairway Developmen Plan Before -5.5Mlws to Be -12Mlws
Prepared by IPC Cirebon 21/09/17 A glimpses of Port of Cirebon Operation Area of Pelindo I,II,III and IV We are ‘HERE’ 3 | Energizing Trade. Energizing Indonesia Port of Cirebon – Facility and Equipment Dermaga Samadikun : 67 M / -4 MLWs LAPANGAN 2 Lp. Muarajati : 4.480 M Dermaga Perniagaan I - IV : 44 M / -3 MLWs 2 Lp. Pelita : 9.780 M 2 Dermaga S. Sumantri I - V : 68 M / -3,5 MLWs Lp. Suryat Sumantri : 8.048 M 2 Dermaga Muara Jati I - III : 603 M / -5,5 sd -6 MLWs Lp. Linggarjati : 5.600 M GUDANG Dermaga Linggar Jati I -II : 171 M / -4,5 MLWs 2 Gudang Muarajati : 4.000 M Dermaga Pelita I - III : 98 M / -5,5 MLWs 2 Gudang 101 : 1.806 M Kade Khusus Pelra : 150 M / -2 MLWs 2 Gudang 102 : 1.500 M 2 Total Panjang Dermaga : 1,201 M Gudang 103 : 306 M 2 Gudang 104 : 1.050 M 2 Gudang Terbuka Pelra : 1.200 M Wheel Loader Kap.5,1 M3 HL 780- Mobil Crane IHI 25 Ton 1 1 7A Merk Hyundai Jembatan Timbang 1 Wheel Loader Kap.5 Ton 1 Excavator Komatsu 2 Wheel Loader kap 3 Ton 1 Excavator Hyundai 2 Rampdoor 3 Excavator Caterpilar 2 Forklift Kap.5 Ton 1 Dump Truck 4 4 Mobil PMK Kapasitas 5.000 m3 1 4 | Energizing Trade. Energizing Indonesia Port of Cirebon - Ships Traffic Dominate by Tug and Barge Gross Tonnage Unit 2.500.000 1.800 1.600 2.000.000 1.400 1.200 1.500.000 1.000 800 1.000.000 600 500.000 400 200 - - s/d Juli s/d Juli 2013 2014 2015 2016 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2017 GT 1.974.9 2.139.0 1.987.1 1.048.8 1.296.7 UNIT 1.407 1.536 1.329 788 934 5 | Energizing Trade. -
Taiwanese Eyes on the Modern: Cold War Dance Diplomacy And
Taiwanese Eyes on the Modern: Cold War Dance Diplomacy and American Modern Dances in Taiwan, 1950–1980 Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Tsung-Hsin Lee, M.A. Graduate Program in Dance Studies The Ohio State University 2020 Dissertation Committee Hannah Kosstrin, Advisor Harmony Bench Danielle Fosler-Lussier Morgan Liu Copyrighted by Tsung-Hsin Lee 2020 2 Abstract This dissertation “Taiwanese Eyes on the Modern: Cold War Dance Diplomacy and American Modern Dances in Taiwan, 1950–1980” examines the transnational history of American modern dance between the United States and Taiwan during the Cold War era. From the 1950s to the 1980s, the Carmen De Lavallade-Alvin Ailey, José Limón, Paul Taylor, Martha Graham, and Alwin Nikolais dance companies toured to Taiwan under the auspices of the U.S. State Department. At the same time, Chinese American choreographers Al Chungliang Huang and Yen Lu Wong also visited Taiwan, teaching and presenting American modern dance. These visits served as diplomatic gestures between the members of the so-called Free World led by the U.S. Taiwanese audiences perceived American dance modernity through mixed interpretations under the Cold War rhetoric of freedom that the U.S. sold and disseminated through dance diplomacy. I explore the heterogeneous shaping forces from multiple engaging individuals and institutions that assemble this diplomatic history of dance, resulting in outcomes influencing dance histories of the U.S. and Taiwan for different ends. I argue that Taiwanese audiences interpreted American dance modernity as a means of embodiment to advocate for freedom and social change. -
The Phenomenon of Transitivity in the Ukrainian Language
THE PHENOMENON OF TRANSITIVITY IN THE UKRAINIAN LANGUAGE 2 CONTENT INTRODUCTION……………………………………………………………… 3 Section 1. GENERAL CONCEPT OF TRANSITIVITY……………………. 8 Liudmyla Shytyk. CONCEPTS OF TRANSITIVITY IN LINGUISTICS……... 8 1.1. The meaning of the term «transition» and «transitivity»…………….. 8 1.2. Transitivity typology…………………………………………………... 11 1.3. The phenomenon of syncretism in the lingual plane…………………. 23 Section 2. TRANSITIVITY PHENOMENA IN THE UKRAINIAN LEXICOLOGY AND GRAMMAR…………………………………………... 39 Alla Taran. SEMANTIC TRANSITIVITY IN VOCABULARY……………… 39 Iryna Melnyk. TRANSPOSITIONAL PHENOMENA IN THE PARTS OF SPEECH SYSTEM……………………………………………………………… 70 Mykhailo Vintoniv. SYNCRETISM IN THE SYSTEM OF ACTUAL SENTENCE DIVISION………………………………………………………… 89 Section 3. TRANSITIVITY IN AREAL LINGUISTIC……………………... 114 Hanna Martynova. AREAL CHARAKTERISTIC OF THE MID-UPPER- DNIEPER DIALECT IN THE ASPECT OF TRANSITIVITY……………….... 114 3.1. Transitivity as areal issue……………………………………………… 114 3.2. The issue of boundary of the Mid-Upper-Dnieper patois…………….. 119 3.3. Transitive patois of Podillya-Mid-Upper-Dnieper boundary…………. 130 Tetiana Tyshchenko. TRANSITIVE PATOIS OF MID-UPPER-DNIEPER- PODILLYA BORDER………………………………………………………….. 147 Tetiana Shcherbyna. MID-UPPER-DNIEPER AND STEPPE BORDER DIALECTS……………………………………………………………………… 167 Section 4. THE PHENOMENA OF SYNCRETISM IN HISTORICAL PROJECTION…………………………………………………………………. 198 Vasyl Denysiuk. DUALIS: SYNCRETIC DISAPPEARANCE OR OFFICIAL NON-RECOGNITION………………………………………………………….. 198 Oksana Zelinska. LINGUAL MEANS OF THE REALIZATION OF GENRE- STYLISTIC SYNCRETISM OF A UKRAINIAN BAROQUE SERMON……. 218 3 INTRODUCTION In modern linguistics, the study of complex systemic relations and language dynamism is unlikely to be complete without considering the transitivity. Traditionally, transitivity phenomena are treated as a combination of different types of entities, formed as a result of the transformation processes or the reflection of the intermediate, syncretic facts that characterize the language system in the synchronous aspect. -
Contours and Consequences of the Lexical Divide in Ukrainian
Geoffrey Hull and Halyna Koscharsky1 Contours and Consequences of the Lexical Divide in Ukrainian When compared with its two large neighbours, Russian and Polish, the Ukrainian language presents a picture of striking internal variation. Not only are Ukrainian dialects more mutually divergent than those of Polish or of territorially more widespread Russian,2 but on the literary level the language has long been characterized by the existence of two variants of the standard which have never been perfectly harmonized, in spite of the efforts of nationalist writers for a century and a half. While Ukraine’s modern standard language is based on the eastern dialect of the Kyiv-Poltava-Kharkiv triangle, the literary Ukrainian cultivated by most of the diaspora communities continues to follow to a greater or lesser degree the norms of the Lviv koiné in 1 The authors would like to thank Dr Lance Eccles of Macquarie University for technical assistance in producing this paper. 2 De Bray (1969: 30-35) identifies three main groups of Russian dialects, but the differences are the result of internal evolutionary divergence rather than of external influences. The popular perception is that Russian has minimal dialectal variation compared with other major European languages. Maximilian Fourman (1943: viii), for instance, told students of Russian that the language ‘is amazingly uniform; the same language is spoken over the vast extent of the globe where the flag of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics flies; and you will be understood whether you are speaking to a peasant or a university professor. There are no dialects to bother you, although, of course, there are parts of the Soviet Union where Russian may be spoken rather differently, as, for instance, English is spoken differently by a Londoner, a Scot, a Welshman, an Irishman, or natives of Yorkshire or Cornwall. -
Rise of China and the Cross-Strait Relations by Philip Yang National Taiwan University
tik 5th Europe-Northeast Asia Forum i The Taiwan Strait and Northeast Asian Security Berlin, 15-17 December 2005 A conference jointly organised by Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP), Berlin, the Korean Institute for International Studies (KIIS), Seoul, and the Federal Ministry of Defence, Berlin Discussion Paper Do Note Cite or Quote without Author’s Permission ftung Wissenschaft und Pol Sti Rise of China and the Cross-Strait Relations by Philip Yang National Taiwan University German Institute for International and Security Affairs SWP Ludwigkirchplatz 3–4 10719 Berlin Phone +49 30 880 07-0 Fax +49 30 880 07-100 www.swp-berlin.org In East Asia, the rise of China has dominated most regional policy discussion and deliberation. In almost every field of regional concerns, China’s rise has posed new challenges and brought profound implications. The impacts of China's rise on cross-strait relations are also heatedly discussed in Taiwan’s academia as well as media. China’s surging economy and newfound political clout expand its tool box in handling cross-strait relations and complicate U.S. role in dealing with the cross-strait political and military stalemate. With its missile deployments directed at Taiwan and the adoption of an anti-secession law threatening the use of force to deter Taiwan’s pursuance of de jure independence, China’s coercive cross-strait policy could severely challenge the island and its most important ally, the United States. However, China’s rising economic power and political status in the region have also been translated into a growing pool of “soft” power, affording Beijing increasing leverage on cross-strait issues. -
Taasa Review Josefa Green the ASIAN ARTS SOCIETY of AUSTRALIA INC
VOLUME 19 NO. 2 JUNE 2010 the journal of the asian arts society of australia TAASA Review SOUTHEAST ASIAN ANCESTRAL ART c o n t E n t s Volume 19 No. 2 June 2010 3 Editorial: SouthEaSt AsiaN aNcestraL art taasa rEVIEw Josefa Green THE ASIAN ARTS SOCIETY OF AUSTRALIA INC. ABN 64093697537 • Vol. 19 No. 2, June 2010 ISSN 1037.6674 4 lifE, dEath and Magic: 2000 YEars of southEast asian ancEstral art registered by australia post. publication No. NbQ 4134 Robyn Maxwell EditorIAL • email: [email protected] 7 BEadwork of island southEast asia General editor, Josefa Green Hwei-F’en Cheah puBlications committee 9 ancEstors in thE architEcturE: indigEnous art froM taiwan Josefa Green (convenor) • Tina Burge Melanie Eastburn • Sandra Forbes • Ann MacArthur Lucie Folan Jim Masselos • Ann Proctor • Susan Scollay Sabrina Snow • Christina Sumner 11 splEndour for thE ancEstors – thE sculpture and gold of nias dEsign/laYout Niki van den Heuvel Ingo Voss, VossDesign printing 13 Small and potEnt – fishing charMs and the MElanau of BornEo John Fisher Printing Charlotte Galloway published by the asian arts Society of australia inc. 14 portraits froM india 1850s – 1950s pO box 996 potts point NSw 2011 Anne O’Hehir www.taasa.org.au Enquiries: [email protected] 17 in thE puBlic doMain: a NEw DiSpLay at thE NationaL Museum Of caMbodia TAASA Review is published quarterly and is distributed to members Oun Phalline and Martin Polkinghorne of the asian arts Society of australia inc. TAASA Review welcomes submissions of articles, notes and reviews on asian visual and 18 cultural EncountErs: thE rEvErsE gaze of kutch painting performing arts. -
Yuliya Walsh Dissertation [email protected]
FORMS OF ADDRESS IN CONTEMPORARY UKRAINIAN NEWSPAPERS: Morphology, Gender and Pragmatics DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Yuliya Walsh Graduate Program in Slavic and East European Languages and Cultures The Ohio State University 2014 Dissertation Committee: Daniel Collins, Advisor, Predrag Matejic, Brian Joseph Copyright by Yuliya Walsh 2014 Abstract This dissertation examines variation in nominal (unbound) address forms and related constructions in contemporary (post-Soviet) Ukrainian. The data come from 134 randomly selected articles in two Ukrainian newspapers dating from 1998–2013. Among the morphological and syntactic issues that receive particular attention are the allomorphy of the Ukrainian vocative and the spread of vocative markings to new categories (e.g., last names). In addition, the dissertation examines how the vocative behaves in apposition with other noun phrases; this sheds light on the controversial question of the status of the vocative in the Ukrainian case system. Another syntactic issue discussed in the study is the collocability of the unbound address and deferential reference term pan, which has become widespread in the post-Soviet period. The dissertation also examines several pragmatic issues relevant for the variation in contemporary Ukrainian address. First, it investigates how familiarity and distance affect the choice of different unbound address forms. Second, it examines how the gender of the speech act participants (addresser and addressee) influence preferencs for particular forms of address. Up to now, there have been scarcely any investigations of Ukrainian from the viewpoint of either pragmatics or gender linguistics. -
The Dynamics of the Bathymetry of Shipping Channel in Cirebon Port, West Java Province
Depik, 3(1): 74-82 April 2014 ISSN 2089-7790 Dinamika batimetri alur pelayaran Pelabuhan Cirebon, Provinsi Jawa Barat The dynamics of the bathymetry of shipping channel in Cirebon Port, West Java Province Muhammad F. A. Ismail 1Pusat Penelitian Oseanografi - Lembaga Ilmu Pengetahuan Indonesia, Jl. Pasir Putih I Ancol Timur Jakarta 14430. *Email Korespondensi: [email protected] Abstract. The Port of Cirebon is one of the largest port in West Java Province. The main problem in the Port of Cirebon is shallowing of the shipping channel due to sedimentation. The objective of this research was to assess the dynamics of the the bathymetry of shipping channel in Cirebon Port. The data used in this research are bathymetric survey data and ocean current data in the year 2006 and 2007 that was measured by PT. Pelabuhan Indonesia II. Bathymetric map was created using Surfer program version 8.0. Research results showed that the shipping channel depth of Cirebon Port varies in the range of 0.36 m to 6.97 m in 2006 and 0.79 m to 6.87 m in 2007. During the period of the year 2006 to the year 2007 sedimentation was occurred that marked by the increase of the volume of the sediment surface reached 6,818 m3. The ocean current around the Port of Cirebon is dominated by the tidal current with the direction to the northwest and to the southwest parallel to the shoreline which transported sediment into the shipping channel of Cirebon Port. Keywords: Port of Cirebon; Bathymetry; Sedimentation; Ocean current. Abstrak. Pelabuhan Cirebon merupakan salah satu pelabuhan paling besar di Jawa Barat. -
Outsourcing Workers in Indonesia Port Corporation II
World Maritime University The Maritime Commons: Digital Repository of the World Maritime University World Maritime University Dissertations Dissertations 2014 Outsourcing workers in Indonesia Port Corporation II : a cost effective measure in The Procurement Bureau and recommended actions for IPC Ni Made Devita World Maritime University Follow this and additional works at: http://commons.wmu.se/all_dissertations Recommended Citation Devita, Ni Made, "Outsourcing workers in Indonesia Port Corporation II : a cost effective measure in The rP ocurement Bureau and recommended actions for IPC" (2014). World Maritime University Dissertations. 472. http://commons.wmu.se/all_dissertations/472 This Dissertation is brought to you courtesy of Maritime Commons. Open Access items may be downloaded for non-commercial, fair use academic purposes. No items may be hosted on another server or web site without express written permission from the World Maritime University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WORLD MARITIME UNIVERSITY Malmö, Sweden OUTSOURCING WORKERS IN INDONESIA PORT CORPORATION II A Cost EffectiveMeasure In The Procurement Bureau and Recommended Actions for IPC By NI MADE DEVITA Republic of Indonesia A dissertation submitted to the World Maritime University in partial Fulfilment of the requirements for the award of the degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE In MARITIME AFFAIRS PORT MANAGEMENT 2014 ©Copyright Ni Made Devita, 2014 i DECLARATION I certify that all the material in this dissertation that is not my own work has been identified,and that no material is included for which a degree has previously been conferred on me. The contents of this dissertation reflect my own personal views, and are not necessarily endorsed by the University. -
University of Groningen the Governance of Small Cities In
University of Groningen The Governance of Small Cities in Decentralizing Indonesia Rahayu, Paramita IMPORTANT NOTE: You are advised to consult the publisher's version (publisher's PDF) if you wish to cite from it. Please check the document version below. Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Publication date: 2016 Link to publication in University of Groningen/UMCG research database Citation for published version (APA): Rahayu, P. (2016). The Governance of Small Cities in Decentralizing Indonesia: The Case of Cirebon City and Its Surrounding Regions. Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. Copyright Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). The publication may also be distributed here under the terms of Article 25fa of the Dutch Copyright Act, indicated by the “Taverne” license. More information can be found on the University of Groningen website: https://www.rug.nl/library/open-access/self-archiving-pure/taverne- amendment. Take-down policy If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Downloaded from the University of Groningen/UMCG research database (Pure): http://www.rug.nl/research/portal. For technical reasons the number of authors shown on this cover page is limited to 10 maximum. Download date: 30-09-2021 The Governance of Small Cities in Decentralizing Indonesia The Case of Cirebon City and Its Surrounding Regions Paramita Rahayu i ISBN: 978-90-367-8823-6 Cover Design : Andika Pramana ([email protected]) Printed by: Ipskamp Printing, Enschede ii The Governance of Small Cities in Decentralizing Indonesia The Case of Cirebon City and Its Surrounding Regions PhD thesis to obtain the degree of PhD at the University of Groningen on the authority of the Rector Magnificus Prof. -
A Spatial Analysis of the Recreation Potential of Cirebon, Indonesia’S Kratons
Advances in Applied Sociology 2013. Vol.3, No.8, 329-333 Published Online December 2013 in SciRes (http://www.scirp.org/journal/aasoci) http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/aasoci.2013.38042 A Spatial Analysis of the Recreation Potential of Cirebon, Indonesia’s Kratons Henny N. Edelman1, David J. Edelman2 1Putrie Consulting, Cincinnati, USA 2University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, USA Email: [email protected] Received October 28th, 2013; revised November 28th, 2013; accepted December 5th, 2013 Copyright © 2013 Henny N. Edelman, David J. Edelman. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Cirebon is an important port city located on the provincial, as well as cultural, border of West and Central Java. Historically, an important Indonesian melting pot, it is an expanding center of commerce and indus- try. There remain, however, a number of special artistic and cultural features of the city revealed by mo- tifs reflecting the traditions of the Kratons, or former palaces of the Sultanate of Cirebon, which reached its height in the fifteenth century. This paper presents an analysis of the Kratons of Cirebon as a recrea- tional and tourism resource within the concept of the spatial analysis of recreational behavior. It is struc- tured around various aspects of the relationship between human spatial behavior and leisure environ- ments. Keywords: Kratons; Cirebon; Tourism; Human Spatial Behavior; Leisure Environments Introduction analysis of recreational behavior. It will be structured around various aspects of the relationship between human spatial be- Cirebon is an important port city in the south-western part of havior and leisure environments.