Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 50
pro vyhledávání: '"Steven F. Miller"'
Autor:
René Hayden, Anthony E. Kaye, Kate Masur, Steven F. Miller, Susan E. O'Donovan, Leslie S. Rowland, Stephen A. West
Land and Labor, 1866-1867 examines the remaking of the South's labor system in the tumultuous aftermath of emancipation. Using documents selected from the National Archives, this volume of Freedom: A Documentary History of Emancipation depicts the st
Freedom: A Documentary History of Emancipation, 1861-1867 : Series 3, Volume 1: Land and Labor, 1865
Land and Labor, 1865 examines the transition from slavery to free labor during the tumultuous first months after the Civil War. Letters and testimony by the participants--former slaves, former slaveholders, Freedmen's Bureau agents, and others--revea
Publikováno v:
Corpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory. 16:29-66
Loanword use has dominated the literature on language contact and its salient nature continues to draw interest from linguists and non-linguists. Traditionally, loanwords were investigated by means of raw frequencies, which are at best uninformative
Publikováno v:
Asia-Pacific Language Variation. 5:109-137
The borrowing of words from one language into another is most likely as ancient as language itself. While ample linguistic attention has focused on various linguistic contact scenarios in which words from one language enter productive use into anothe
Autor:
John R. Shaffer, Lina M. Moreno Uribe, Brad A. Amendt, Seth M. Weinberg, Myoung Keun Lee, Sareena Ali, Mary L. Marazita, Daniel E. Ehrlich, Steven F. Miller
Publikováno v:
The FASEB Journal. 33
Autor:
Jaime Ruiz, Nicholas Branham, Mary L. Marazita, Steven F. Miller, Russell Moskal, Daniel E. Ehrlich, Myoung Keun Lee, Seth M. Weinberg, Lisa Nguyen
Publikováno v:
The FASEB Journal. 33
Autor:
Steven F. Miller
Skeletal superstructure characteristics such as thick cranial vaults and welldeveloped supraorbital, infraorbital, zygomatic, temporal, and nuchal regions in hominins are collectively referred to as aspects of craniofacial robusticity. A better under
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::f38cccc479a795680ce8c3ecfce6b7f8
https://doi.org/10.17077/etd.r5skoi5g
https://doi.org/10.17077/etd.r5skoi5g
Autor:
Jennifer Caplin, Christina L. Nicholas, Lauren A. Gordon, Maria Therese S. Galang-Boquiren, Steven F. Miller, Sahar Alrayyes
Publikováno v:
Archives of Oral Biology. 121:104964
Objective We hypothesize that childhood obesity influences both facial and mandibular size and form in children and adolescents. Design Pre-treatment records of patients (n = 181; 86 males, 95 females) from the Department of Orthodontics at the Unive
Autor:
David G. Gratton, Lina M. Moreno Uribe, Thomas E. Southard, Steven F. Miller, Steven M. Levy, Kaci C. Vela
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Human Biology. 28:879-889
Objectives In humans, there is a large range of variation in the form of the maxillary and mandibular dental arches. This variation can manifest as either prognathism or retrognathism in either or both arches, which can cause malocclusion and lead to
Autor:
Thomas E. Southard, Sreedevi Srinivasan, Steven D. Marshall, Nathan E. Holton, Christopher Hartman, Steven F. Miller, Todd R. Yokley
Publikováno v:
The Anatomical Record. 299:295-306
During ontogeny, the nasal septum exerts a morphogenetic influence on the surrounding facial skeleton. While the influence of the septum is well established in long snouted animal models, its role in human facial growth is less clear. If the septum i