10,804 research outputs found
Echo, Summer/Fall 2007
Student-produced magazine formerly published as Chicago Arts and Communication, changed to Echo magazine in 1997. Cover Articles: women at war: Columbia students talk about their time in Iraq; Why some adults say \u27no\u27 to sex; Are you a technology addict?; How to be a good Samaritan; A grave look at ghosts; Chicago\u27s fashion future: a preview. 74 pages.https://digitalcommons.colum.edu/echo/1022/thumbnail.jp
Termination
Includes bibliographical references.Termination is a genre novel which follows a contemporary crime fiction format. It adheres closely to the narrative shape of modem mystery books, containing the essential elements which constitute a work in this field. With a few twists. Contemporary crime fiction can follow a couple of paths along the way to solving a misdemeanour. Which is usually a murder. The protagonist is either on the spot and in the plot by virtue of his/her job. In other words, they could be a cop, forensic specialist, medical examiner, private investigator etc. Or they could be drawn reluctantly into a scenario, by circumstance or due to an over-developed sense of "doing the right thing.
Columbia Chronicle (11/26/2007)
Student newspaper from November 26, 2007 entitled The Columbia Chronicle. This issue is 40 pages and is listed as Volume 43, Number 13. Cover story: Protested and arrested Editor-in-Chief: Amanda Maurerhttps://digitalcommons.colum.edu/cadc_chronicle/1716/thumbnail.jp
Speciesism and language: a sociolinguistic approach to the presence of speciesism in current British speech
Trabajo de fin de Grado. Grado en Estudios Ingleses. Curso académico 2016-2017[EN]This paper is an attempt to study the presence of speciesism in the British culture by
analyzing its language. Being this form of discrimination still highly prevalent worldwide, the
aim of the essay is to analyze to what extent the English language used in Britain is
influenced by it. For this purpose, two popular forms of the language have been analyzed:
insults and proverbs. The research has been based on the answers of a survey addressed to
young British English speakers and the results obtained from oral entries of the British
National Corpus. The results of the study have shown a high influence of speciesism in the
language and how normalized it is, proving that this form of discrimination is still highly
accepted in the British society and therefore present in its language. [ES]El propósito de este trabajo es el de estudiar la presencia del especismo en la cultura británica
analizando su lenguaje. Debido al hecho de que esta forma de discriminación está todavía
muy extendida alrededor de todo el mundo, este estudio pretende analizar hasta qué punto ha
influenciado al inglés hablado en Reino Unido. Para esto hemos analizado dos formas
populares del lenguaje: los insultos y los refranes. El estudio se ha basado en las respuestas de
una encuesta completada por jóvenes Británicos y en los resultados obtenidos del análisis en
entradas orales del British National Corpus. Los resultados del estudio han mostrado una alta
influencia del especismo en el lenguaje y lo normalizado que está, demostrando que esta
forma de discriminación todavía está ampliamente aceptada en la sociedad Británica y por lo
tanto presente en el lenguaje
The Winonan
https://openriver.winona.edu/thewinonan2010s/1002/thumbnail.jp
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