Introduction: Since the beginning of Amazon.com’s creation in the 1990’s, books have been a major component of the business. In fact books were the first items Amazon ever sold, before being joined by other items. Recently Amazon.com ventured into the publishing sector by allowing people to self-publish their works, and this has created a vast…
Since early 2007, the Library of Congress has been developing Library of Congress Genre/Form Terms for Library and Archival Materials (LCGFT), whose terms describe what something is rather than what it is about, as subject headings do. In March 2015 the Policy and Standards Division (PSD) will approve approximately 390 genre/form terms for literary works.
The Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) is perhaps the most widely adopted subject indexing language in the world, has been translated into many languages, and is used around the world by libraries large and small. LCSH has been actively maintained since 1898 to catalog materials held at the Library of Congress. Proposals for additions and changes are reviewed regularly at staff meetings in the Policy and Standards Division (PSD) and an approved list is published.
Use of SFL to map the role of language (form and function) in learning History in Australian Secondary schools. Consciousness raising- both staff and students. Included ethnographic interviews to identify approx. 100 successful texts for analysis. Genre -purpose -staging. Teaching -learning cycle (deconstruction - work on genre- grammar-lexis - students' writing improved - particularly text structure and organisation.
L’épidémiologie des addictions a très tôt mis en en évidence une prédominance
masculine quasi exclusive parmi les consommateurs d’alcool, de tabac et d’autres
drogues. Les mêmes études ont également démontré des spécificités de genre .... Ces particularités suggèrent le besoin de réponses originales
à l’égard de chaque sexe, en prévention comme en soins .... Néanmoins, la diffusion et la nature des
approches « au féminin » demeurent, en France, insuffisamment connues.
D. Nguyen, D. Trieschnigg, und M. Theune. Proceedings of the 23rd ACM International Conference on Conference on Information and Knowledge Management, Seite 321--330. ACM, (2014)
E. Boese, und A. Howe. Proceedings of the 14th ACM International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management, Seite 632--639. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2005)
D. Elson, N. Dames, und K. McKeown. Proceedings of the 48th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, Seite 138–147. Association for Computational Linguistics, The Association for Computer Linguistics, (2010)
Y. Lee, und S. Myaeng. Proceedings of the 25th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval, Seite 145--150. ACM, (2002)
B. Pang, L. Lee, und S. Vaithyanathan. Proceedings of the ACL-02 conference on Empirical methods in natural language processing-Volume 10, Seite 79--86. Association for Computational Linguistics, (2002)
E. Stamatatos, N. Fakotakis, und G. Kokkinakis. Proceedings of the 18th conference on Computational linguistics-Volume 2, Seite 808--814. Association for Computational Linguistics, (2000)
B. Kessler, G. Numberg, und H. Schütze. Proceedings of the 35th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics and Eighth Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, Seite 32--38. Association for Computational Linguistics, (1997)
N. Rezapour Asheghi, K. Markert, und S. Sharoff. Proceedings of TextGraphs-9: the workshop on Graph-based Methods for Natural Language Processing, Seite 39--47. Doha, Qatar, Association for Computational Linguistics, (Oktober 2014)
C. Coffin. NALDIC Quarterly, 3 (3):
13--26(2006)<b>Copyright</b><br></br>Copyright for individual contributions remains vested in the authors to whom applications for rights toreproduce should be made. NALDIC Quarterly should always be acknowledged as the original source ofpublication.NALDIC retains the right to republish any of the contributions in this issue in future NALDIC publicationsor to make them available in electronic form for the benefit of its members. For further information contactpublications@naldic.org.uk.