linguaelei.blogspot.com
A Língua e a Lei: Fonética Forense no Brasil
http://linguaelei.blogspot.com/2012/10/fonetica-forense-no-brasil.html
A Língua e a Lei. Blog de Linguística Forense. 29 de outubro de 2012. Fonética Forense no Brasil. Uma busca rápida no google nos mostra que, no Brasil, a sub-área de Linguística Forense mais desenvolvida e, eu diria, “institucionalizada” é a Fonética Forense. Livro de Antonio Braid, Fonética Forense. Da ed Millennium,. Laboratório de Fonética Forense. Do Instituto Brasileiro de Peritos. O Instituto de Criminalística do Instituto Geral de Perícias de Santa Catarina conta com um Setor de Fonética. Wordcrim...
lawlit.blogspot.com
Law & Humanities Blog: John Henry Merryman Dies
http://lawlit.blogspot.com/2015/08/john-henry-merryman-dies.html
Law and Humanities Blog. A blog about law, the humanities, and popular culture. August 6, 2015. John Henry Merryman Dies. More about him in this piece from the Stanford Lawyer. A list of his major works is here. Labels: John Henry Merryman. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Law and Humanities Blog. An independent blog supporting law and humanities activities and scholarship, including the work of the. Law and Humanities Institute. Daniel J. Solove. AIDEL: Associazione Italiana Diretto e Letteratura.
lawnlinguistics.com
Words | LAWnLinguistics
https://lawnlinguistics.com/category/words
Not about the linguistics of lawns. Flores-Figueroa (aggravated identity theft). The Supreme Court’s misinterpretation of the word “because”. October 28, 2015. The post before this one, dealing with the dueling canons in. Lockhart v. United States. Was my first after a gap of more than two years. In my last post before that gap, I wrote about an amicus brief. I had just filed in the Supreme Court in. Nassar v. University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. Gross v. FBL Financial Services. Continue read...
lawnlinguistics.com
LAWnLinguistics | Not about the linguistics of lawns | Page 2
https://lawnlinguistics.com/page/2
Not about the linguistics of lawns. Flores-Figueroa (aggravated identity theft). Newer posts →. Last antecedents, series qualifiers, and psycholinguistics. October 8, 2012. In my post Three syntactic canons. I discussed the three canons of interpretation in Scalia and Garner’s. That deal with syntactic ambiguities:. A pronoun, relative pronoun, or demonstrative adjective generally refers to the nearest reasonable antecedent. Now the bad news. First, the processing tendency that I’ve referred to is ju...
lawnlinguistics.com
Flores-Figueroa (aggravated identity theft) | LAWnLinguistics
https://lawnlinguistics.com/briefs/flores-figueroa-aggravated-identity-theft
Not about the linguistics of lawns. Flores-Figueroa (aggravated identity theft). Flores-Figueroa (aggravated identity theft). Flores-Figueroa v. United States. 129 S Ct. 1886 (2009). Amicus brief on behalf of linguistics professors. The amicus brief was filed on behalf of four linguistics professors: Thomas Ernst, Georgia M. Green, Jeffrey P. Kaplan, and Sally McConnell-Ginet. It argued that the statute. First, it is a mistake to say that. Modifies only the statute’s verbs. Rather, it modifies the en...
lawnlinguistics.com
Briefs | LAWnLinguistics
https://lawnlinguistics.com/briefs
Not about the linguistics of lawns. Flores-Figueroa (aggravated identity theft). I’ve written a number of briefs that have drawn on ideas and methods from linguistics. The links below will take you to those briefs, or (if you’d prefer) to a short writeup about the case, which will also include links to the brief and other information. University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center v. Nassar. Title VII retaliation; word meaning. See my post on the case here. FCC v AT&T, Inc. United States v. Hayes. Feder...
lawnlinguistics.com
“because” | LAWnLinguistics
https://lawnlinguistics.com/category/words/because
Not about the linguistics of lawns. Flores-Figueroa (aggravated identity theft). Category Archives: “because”. The Supreme Court’s misinterpretation of the word “because”. October 28, 2015. The post before this one, dealing with the dueling canons in. Lockhart v. United States. Was my first after a gap of more than two years. In my last post before that gap, I wrote about an amicus brief. I had just filed in the Supreme Court in. Nassar v. University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. Every time the g...
lawnlinguistics.com
Definiteness | LAWnLinguistics
https://lawnlinguistics.com/category/semantics/definiteness
Not about the linguistics of lawns. Flores-Figueroa (aggravated identity theft). The Recess Appointments Clause (Part 1). February 19, 2013. The DC. Circuit’s recent decision regarding the Recess Appointments Clause ( Noel Canning v. National Labor Relations Board. Bills itself as an exercise in Heller. 128 S Ct. 2783, 2788 (2008). As a result, much of the decision is devoted linguistic issues. That’s the issue I will discuss in this post. In between its formally-designated sessions, Congress is in reces...