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This Is, and Is Not, Shakespeare: A Japanese-Korean Transformation of Othello Hamana, Emi
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Plantas atípicas de Cymbalaria aequitriloba (Viv.) A.Chev. cultivadas en la comarca del Matarraña (Teruel) Martínez Francés, Vanessa - Juan Vicedo, Jorge - Ríos Ruiz, Segundo
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Desigualdad y grandes obras públicas: la ampliación del Canal de Panamá, Inequality and megaprojects: the Panama Canal expansion Aledo Tur, Antonio
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Knowledge spirals, situational leadership and informal learning applied on b-learning methodology Perales Romero, Esther - Chorro Calderón, Elísabet - Viqueira Pérez, Valentín - Martínez Verdú, Francisco Miguel
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Semantic clustering and disambiguation by means of word usage cues from corpora Arranz Corzana, Victoria
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Multilingual acquisition of large scale knowledge resources, Adquisición multilingüe de bases de conocimiento de gran escala Cuadros Oller, Montserrat
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Contribution à l’étude de la dynamique des espèces végétales envahissantes face aux fluctuations des précipitations et des températures dans la plaine de Sidi Bel Abbes (Algérie), Dynamic of weeds under of precipitations and temperature fluctuations in the plain of Sidi Bel Abbes (Algeria) Faraoun, Fatiha - Benabdeli, Khéloufi
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An experience on mechatronics teaching on undergraduate students by means of the Skybot platform: from classroom to robot competition Gil Vázquez, Pablo - Puente Méndez, Santiago Timoteo - Candelas Herías, Francisco Andrés - Perea Fuentes, Iván - García Gómez, Gabriel Jesús - Jara Bravo, Carlos Alberto - Corrales Ramón, Juan Antonio
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Reglas de formación de palabras compuestas en español para la automatización de su reconocimiento, Formation rules of compound words in Spanish to automate recognition Santana Suárez, Octavio - Pérez Aguiar, José Rafael - Gutiérrez Rodríguez, Virginia - Sánchez Berriel, Isabel
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After at least 138 years of discussion, the etymological puzzle is possibly solved: the originally British English informalism kibosh as in “put the kibosh on [something]” could come from the clogmakers’ term kybosh ‘iron bar which, when hot, is used to soften and smooth leather’ (with possible reinforcement from Western Ashkenazic British English khay bash ‘eighteen pence’), Kibosh: etymology of the English word Gold, David L.
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