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The lentil is one of the first foods to have been cultivated and
has maintained excellent socio-economic value for over 8,000 years.
The ancient crop is now a crop for modern times in both developing
and developed countries today.
The international market in recent years has increased
significantly and this crop is gaining an important place in
cropping systems under different ecologies. It is grown in over 35
countries, has a broad range of uses around the world, and the
different seed and plant types adapted to an increasingly wide
range of ecologies makes this comprehensive volume even more
important today.
This book covers all aspects of diversity, breeding and
production technologies, and the contents include;
- Origin, adaptation, ecology and diversity
- Utilization, nutrition and production technologies.
- Genetic enhancement, mutation and wild relatives
- Breeding methods and lensomics achievements
- Productivity, profitability and world trade.
This book presents the most comprehensive and up to date review
of research on lentil production systems, biotic and abiotic
stresses management, quality seed production, storage techniques
and lentil growing around the world. This book will be of great
value to legume breeders, scientists, nutritionists, academic
researchers, graduate students, farmers, traders and consumers in
the developed and the developing world.
In this volume, the author deals explicitly and literally with the
speech-thought relationship. Departing boldly from contemporary
linguistic and psycholinguistic thinking, the author offers us one
of the truly serious efforts since Vygotsky to deal with this
question. A unifying theme is the organization of action, and
speech is seen as growing out of sensory-motor representations that
are simultaneously part of meaning and part of action.
"When I fell ill and stayed ill, I felt like God had chopped me off
at the ankles. I yelped in pain and indignation, I felt painfully
abandoned, diminished and finished. It took me a long time to learn
that God was not out to kill me." Some illnesses begin with a bang,
whipped off to hospital or flattened into bed. Other conditions
creep in until normal life is no longer normal. Life skills are
suddenly out of date. Work, socialising and hobbies are out of
reach. It's a new and scary world. Emily Ackerman knows this world
only too well. She knows what it feels like to cry out to God to
relieve her suffering, to allow her to fulfil her life plans. She
knows what it feels like to wait, year after year, while God works
through her suffering, to fulfil his plans for her life. This book
is about fighting back. It's about reclaiming your life now you're
ill, and finding new ways to live well and serve effectively.
You'll find survival strategies, encouragement, practical advice
and fresh ways to view your situation. God hasn't given up on you:
there's good news from the Bible about living abundantly and
usefully with illness.
Human language is not the same as human speech. We use gestures and
signs to communicate alongside, or instead of, speaking. Yet
gestures and speech are processed in the same areas of the human
brain, and the study of how both have evolved is central to
research on the origins of human communication. Written by one of
the pioneers of the field, this is the first book to explain how
speech and gesture evolved together into a system that all humans
possess. Nearly all theorizing about the origins of language either
ignores gesture, views it as an add-on or supposes that language
began in gesture and was later replaced by speech. David McNeill
challenges the popular 'gesture-first' theory that language first
emerged in a gesture-only form and proposes a groundbreaking theory
of the evolution of language which explains how speech and gesture
became unified.
In this volume, the author deals explicitly and literally with the
speech-thought relationship. Departing boldly from contemporary
linguistic and psycholinguistic thinking, the author offers us one
of the truly serious efforts since Vygotsky to deal with this
question. A unifying theme is the organization of action, and
speech is seen as growing out of sensory-motor representations that
are simultaneously part of meaning and part of action.
The lentil was one of the first foods ever to have been
cultivated. This book presents the most comprehensive and
up-to-date review of research on lentil production, biotic and
abiotic stress management, quality seed production, storage
techniques and lentil growing around the world. This book will be
of great value to legume breeders, scientists, nutritionists,
academic researchers, graduate students, farmers, traders and
consumers in the developed and the developing world.
This landmark study examines the role of gestures in relation to speech and thought. Leading scholars, including psychologists, linguists and anthropologists, offer state-of-the-art analyses to demonstrate that gestures are not merely an embellishment of speech but are integral parts of language itself. The volume contributes to a rapidly growing field of study, offering a wide range of theoretical perspectives. It has strong cross-linguistic and cross-cultural components, examining gestures by speakers of Mayan, Australian, East Asian, as well as English and European languages.
This landmark study examines the role of gestures in relation to speech and thought. Leading scholars, including psychologists, linguists and anthropologists, offer state-of-the-art analyses to demonstrate that gestures are not merely an embellishment of speech but are integral parts of language itself. The volume contributes to a rapidly growing field of study, offering a wide range of theoretical perspectives. It has strong cross-linguistic and cross-cultural components, examining gestures by speakers of Mayan, Australian, East Asian, as well as English and European languages.
Gesturing is such an integral yet unconscious part of communication
that we are mostly oblivious to it. But if you observe anyone in
conversation, you are likely to see his or her fingers, hands, and
arms in some form of spontaneous motion. Why? David McNeill, a
pioneer in the ongoing study of the relationship between gesture
and language, set about answering this question over twenty-five
years ago. In "Gesture and Thought" he brings together years of
this research, arguing that gesturing, an act which has been
popularly understood as an accessory to speech, is actually a
dialectical and integral component of language.
"Gesture and Thought" expands on McNeill's acclaimed classic "Hand
and Mind." While that earlier work demonstrated what gestures
reveal about thought, here gestures are shown to be active
participants in both speaking and thinking. Expanding on an
approach introduced by Lev Vygotsky in the 1930s, McNeill posits
that gestures are key ingredients in an "imagery-language
dialectic" that fuels both speech "and" thought. Gestures are both
the "imagery" and components of "language." The smallest element of
this dialectic is the "growth point," an "idea unit" of an
utterance at its beginning psychological stage. Utilizing several
innovative experiments he created and administered with subjects
spanning several different age, gender, language, and neurological
groups, McNeill shows how growth points organize themselves into
utterances and extend to discourse at the moment of speaking.
An ambitious project in the ongoing study of the relationship of
human communication and thought, "Gesture and Thought "is a work of
such consequence that it will influence all subsequenttheory on the
subject.
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Adventure (Hardcover)
Mark Greene; Illustrated by David McNeill
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R266
Discovery Miles 2 660
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A beautiful, original and compelling invitation into the drama,
wonder and mystery of the Christmas story. The warm rhythms and
fresh directness of Mark Greene's poems are graced not only by
illuminating design and gorgeous illustrations but by reflections
that poignantly and powerfully connect the ancient world with our
own. Intriguing and uplifting, Adventure makes an exquisite gift
for Christmas, an enriching companion for Advent and a source of
inspiration in any season.
What is the relation between gestures and speech? In terms of
symbolic forms, of course, the spontaneous and unwitting gestures
we make while talking differ sharply from spoken language itself.
Whereas spoken language is linear, segmented, standardized, and
arbitrary, gestures are global, synthetic, idiosyncratic, and
imagistic. In Hand and Mind, David McNeill presents a bold theory
of the essential unity of speech and the gestures that accompany
it. This long-awaited, provocative study argues that the unity of
gestures and language far exceeds the surface level of speech noted
by previous researchers and in fact also includes the semantic and
pragmatic levels of language. In effect, the whole concept of
language must be altered to take into account the nonsegmented,
instantaneous, and holistic images conveyed by gestures. McNeill
and his colleagues carefully devised a standard methodology for
examining the speech and gesture behavior of individuals engaged in
narrative discourse. A research subject is shown a cartoon like the
1950 Canary Row--a classic Sylvester and Tweedy Bird caper that
features Sylvester climbing up a downspout, swallowing a bowling
ball and slamming into a brick wall. After watching the cartoon,
the subject is videotaped recounting the story from memory to a
listener who has not seen the cartoon. Painstaking analysis of the
videotapes revealed that although the research subjects--children
as well as adults, some neurologically impaired--represented a wide
variety of linguistic groupings, the gestures of people speaking
English and a half dozen other languages manifest the same
principles. Relying on data from more than ten years of research,
McNeill shows thatgestures do not simply form a part of what is
said and meant but have an impact on thought itself. He
persuasively argues that because gestures directly transfer mental
images to visible forms, conveying ideas that language cannot
always express, we must examine language and gesture together to
unveil the operations of the mind.
As children begin to use language in early childhood, they produce
increasingly large units of coherent speech, including narrative
descriptions of events. This book examines the process of narrative
development in young children, focusing on the development of
'cohesion' - the use of speech and gesture to create coherent
perspectives on events. Surveying early narrative development in
which gesture plays an integral part, the book explores the
development of cohesive, clause-linking devices during the period
from age two to three. Illustrated with longitudinal cases studies,
the book examines the crib-talk of two-year-old Emily and compares
it to the discourse patterns of storybooks and nursery rhymes, and
to her father's pre-bedtime routines. In a second case study, the
authors trace the changing relationships between speech and gesture
in the spontaneous narratives of two-year-old Ella. This book will
be invaluable to students and researchers in language acquisition,
developmental psychology and gesture studies.
Gestures are fundamental to the way we communicate, yet our
understanding of this communicative impulse is clouded by a number
of ingrained assumptions. Are gestures merely ornamentation to
speech? Are they simply an 'add-on' to spoken language? Why do we
gesture? These and other questions are addressed in this
fascinating book. McNeill explains that the common view of language
and gesture as separate entities is misinformed: language is
inseparable from gesture. There is gesture-speech unity. Containing
over 100 illustrations, Why We Gesture provides visual evidence to
support the book's central argument that gestures orchestrate
speech. This compelling book will be welcomed by students and
researchers working in linguistics, psychology and communication.
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Ruins (Paperback)
David McNeill
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R202
Discovery Miles 2 020
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The ancient battle between good and evil is nearing its end. Evil
is winning. Since ancient times, our planet has been visited by
super-intelligent aliens who shift between parallel worlds as
easily as we move from sunlight to shadow. Described in our myths
as angels, gods, and demons, these trans-dimensional beings often
walk among us unnoticed, but they're locked in a battle older than
time, with our future hanging in the balance. The Archons' goal is
to destroy the human race and seize our world for their own.
Standing against them are the Irin, a benevolent race of winged
aliens with great power but limited numbers. As our planet sinks
rapidly toward apocalyptic doom, our only hope lies in the Synaxis,
a group of ordinary men and women conscripted by the Irin and given
supernormal powers. But it's a race against time. And as the
Synaxis members trek across the Scottish highlands to open the
ancient dimensional portal on Iona, they must overcome
heavily-armed psychopaths, flying bat-winged demons, and the
awakening of a long-dormant volcano. Most of all, they must learn
how to use their fantastic new powers to drive back the Archons and
rescue the world from destruction.
Human language is not the same as human speech. We use gestures and
signs to communicate alongside, or instead of, speaking. Yet
gestures and speech are processed in the same areas of the human
brain, and the study of how both have evolved is central to
research on the origins of human communication. Written by one of
the pioneers of the field, this is the first book to explain how
speech and gesture evolved together into a system that all humans
possess. Nearly all theorizing about the origins of language either
ignores gesture, views it as an add-on or supposes that language
began in gesture and was later replaced by speech. David McNeill
challenges the popular 'gesture-first' theory that language first
emerged in a gesture-only form and proposes a groundbreaking theory
of the evolution of language which explains how speech and gesture
became unified.
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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