9 research outputs found

    "The face of the future" (borrowed from Martin Luther King Jr.'s speech before the Youth March for Integrated Schools).

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    The role of context in the interpretation of Southern Sotho discourse

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    Utterances normally mean more than they actually say on the surface, and this extra information is either contained in or inferrable from the context in which such utterances are made. The context of utterances is in the first place linguistic. This means that the complete and accurate interpretation of the utterance depends on what has already been said and/or what has still to be said. This linguistic context can either be explicit, as in REFERENCE and DEIXIS or implicit as in PRESUPPOSITION and IMPLICATURE, where its meaning has to be inferred. In the second p 1 ace, the context of utterance is situational, meaning that utterances are made and should thus be interpreted in their situations of utterance. Even the linguistic context therefore occurs within the situational context. Situational context is normally the extralinguistic environment in which an utterance is made and also/or the social and cultural context of utterance.African LanguagesM.A. (African Languages

    Multiple loci on 8q24 associated with prostate cancer susceptibility

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    Previous studies have identified multiple loci on 8q24 associated with prostate cancer risk. We performed a comprehensive analysis of SNP associations across 8q24 by genotyping tag SNPs in 5,504 prostate cancer cases and 5,834 controls. We confirmed associations at three previously reported loci and identified additional loci in two other linkage disequilibrium blocks (rs1006908: per-allele OR = 0.87, P = 7.9 x 10(-8); rs620861: OR = 0.90, P = 4.8 x 10(-8)). Eight SNPs in five linkage disequilibrium blocks were independently associated with prostate cancer susceptibility

    Identification of seven new prostate cancer susceptibility loci through a genome-wide association study

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    Prostate cancer (PrCa) is the most frequently diagnosed male cancer in developed countries. To identify common PrCa susceptibility alleles, we have previously conducted a genome-wide association study in which 541, 129 SNPs were genotyped in 1,854 PrCa cases with clinically detected disease and 1,894 controls. We have now evaluated promising associations in a second stage, in which we genotyped 43,671 SNPs in 3,650 PrCa cases and 3,940 controls, and a third stage, involving an additional 16,229 cases and 14,821 controls from 21 studies. In addition to previously identified loci, we identified a further seven new prostate cancer susceptibility loci on chromosomes 2, 4, 8, 11, and 22 (P=1.6×10−8 to P=2.7×10−33)
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