All Stories

  1. Event plurality and the verbal suffix ‑(a)bad in Australian Kriol
  2. Introduction
  3. The role of the body in descriptions of emotions
  4. Ear and belly in Warlpiri descriptions of cognitive and emotional experience
  5. Emotion, Body and Mind across a Continent
  6. Do Linguistic Properties Influence Expressive Potential? The Case of Two Australian Diminutives (Gunwinyguan Family)
  7. How creole languages borrow the sense of words from the ancestral languages of their speakers
  8. Morphology and emotions: A preliminary typology
  9. What emotions are expressed by diminutives and augmentatives across the world?
  10. The emotional connotations of reduplication in the creole spoken in the north of Australia
  11. A first dedicated study of how language expresses emotions by means of morphology
  12. Etymologies of kinship and social categories in Australian languages
  13. Does the Australian Kriol use the same emotion metaphors as other Australian languages?
  14. Les conceptions de la propriété foncière à l'épreuve des revendications autochtones : possession, propriété et leurs avatars
  15. Natural kinds, attributes of the person, part of the landscape, parts of artefacts and kin terms
  16. The Language of Emotions. The case of Dalabon
  17. The role of the body in descriptions of emotions
  18. Mythes, missiles et cannibales: Le récit d’un premier contact en Australie
  19. Results and Prospects in the Study of Semantic Change: A Review of From Polysemy to Semantic Change (2008)
  20. Talking about doubt in Dalabon (northern Australia)
  21. How Dalabon speakers talk about emotions
  22. Or Kriol as a bridge between languages and cultures?
  23. Innovative grammatical categories in an Australian creole