evidence-based oor Kornies

evidence-based

Vertalings in die woordeboek Engels - Kornies

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The Cornwall Landscape Character Best Practice Guidance and the Cornwall Landscape Assessment 2007 are both ‘live’ evidence based resources available through the internet at www.cornwall.gov.uk.
Yma’n edhen yn hy neyth.englishtainment-tm-n5GOuF3E englishtainment-tm-n5GOuF3E
Good data and evidence based information are important parts of ensuring services are effective and doing what we need them too to help us be happy, healthy and thrive.
Ny allav vy mos tre.langbot langbot
Good data and evidence based information are important parts of ensuring services are effective and doing what we need them too to help us be happy, healthy and thrive. Leisure
Glas o an ebron.englishtainment-tm-4gq3qjnP englishtainment-tm-4gq3qjnP
After Dr. Ken George’s publication of The Pronunciation And Spelling Of Modern Cornish, there were some critiscisms of its Middle-Cornish phonological base. In Dr. George’s view, some of them had value, but most were based on misinterpretations of ancient texts and place-name evidence. This is a detailed reply to those critiscisms and also includes previously unpublished material on the theoretical and statistical foundation of Kernewek Kemmyn.
Nyns yw res dhis leverel henna.langbot langbot
By the nineteenth century, Cornish had died as a spoken community language, although there are records of the language being spoken particularly at sea by Newlyn fishermen. During this century there was a resurgence of interest in Celtic culture which meant that Cornish attracted some academic attention. The plays of the middle Cornish period were re-visited, and academics such as Edwin Norris and Whitley Stokes published them with commentaries and translations. It was not until early in the twentieth century, however, that an attempt was made to revive the language. In 1904 Henry Jenner, one of a number of individuals interested in and working on Cornish at the time, published his Handbook of the Cornish Language, based on the texts available to him at the British Museum. This kick-started the revival of Cornish as a living, spoken language, and Jenner's work was picked up and continued by, among others, Robert Morton Nance, who researched and gathered together more fragments of the language, finally developing a regularised spelling system based on the medieval texts, known as Unified Cornish. The revival continued to grow throughout the early twentieth century, with evening classes, events and examinations being established as well as some teaching in schools outside the formal curriculum. Books and magazines were published for users of the language. The 1980s and early 1990s saw a time of review and reconsideration about the theory of reviving a language, plus additional research on the texts. This resulted in the proposal of different approaches which moved the language on from the initial research that Jenner and Morton Nance had carried out in the early twentieth century. In the early 1980s Richard Gendall began exploring the Cornish of the Late period. He worked from the premise that a language revival should be based upon the last available evidence from when the language was last spoken, and the form of Cornish now known as Modern Cornish grew out of this work. In the late 1980s, Dr Ken George carried out a great deal of research into the phonology of the language, including how this could be better linked to the orthography by a rationalised spelling system, and the result of this was the beginning of Common Cornish. Then in 1995 Celtic scholar, Professor Nicholas Williams, proposed an amended version of Unified Cornish, called Unified Cornish Revised, which takes the texts of the sixteenth century as its main source.
My a gar Ostrali.langbot langbot
5 sinne gevind in 7 ms. Hulle kom uit baie bronne en word nie nagegaan nie.