p.: basic color terms. university of california press
Revisiting Basic Color Terms
Berkeley: University of. California Press. (Facsimile 1991 edition.) Berlin B. |
1 Universality of Color Categorization1 Paul Kay U.C. Berkeley
& Kay P. (1969). Basic color terms: Their universality and evolution. Berkeley &. Los Angeles: University of California Press. Berlin |
Basic color terms: their universality and evolution. By BRENT
By BRENT BERLIN and PAUL. KAY. Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California Press 1969. Pp. xi |
Berlin and Kay Theory
Department of Philosophy Syracuse University |
The Linguistic Significance of the Meanings of Basic Color Terms
COLOR TERMS. PAUL KAY and CHAD K. MCDANIEL. University of California Berkeley all languages share a universal system of basic color categorization. |
Kay (?) Color naming across languages
naming that has addressed issues raised in Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and. Evolution (Berlin and Kay 1969 hereafter B&K). |
Is the acquisition of basic-colour terms in young children constrained?
2002?10?16? developmental order of acquisition as predicted by Berlin and Kay [1969 Basic Color Terms. (Berkeley CA: University of California Press)]. |
Innovations and insights since Basic Color Terms - Their
2. Berlin B. |
La catégorisation linguistique des couleurs: niveaux délémentarité
Berlin B. |
UNIVERSALITY AND EVOLUTION OF BASIC COLOR TERMS
Brent Berlin and Paul Kay. University of California Berkeley. Working Paper Number 1 |
UNIVERSALITY AND EVOLUTION OF BASIC COLOR TERMS
The eleven basic color categories are white, black, rezl, green, yellow, blue, brown, pink, orange, and grey If a language codes a category from the mth equivalence class, (m LI: 1, 2f, |
Dawn Blackmore TFMpdf - TAUJA
the Berlin and Kay “basic color terms” concept has been analyzed to offer a fresh perspective in was a collaboration between Brent Berlin, and Paul Kay in 1969 This model, helped to University of California Press Bieber, D et al (1998) |
La catégorisation linguistique des couleurs - CORE
écrit par deux anthropologues et linguistes américains, Brent Berlin et Paul Kay a été publié noms de couleurs élémentaires (basic color terms) communs à toutes les langues L'inventaire de noms de ley : University of California Press |