Fecha:"2013" |
Fecha:"2011" |
Fecha:"2006" |
Idioma:"Inglés" |
Repositorio:"RUA Docencia" |
Fecha:"05" |
Fecha:"2012" |
Fecha:"1999" |
Lenguajes y Sistemas Informáticos | (56) |
Educación Física y Deportiva | (18) |
Filología Inglesa | (11) |
Web engineering | (10) |
Ciencia de la Computación e Inteligencia Artificial | (8) |
Más... |
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Complex learning: the role of knowledge, intelligence, motivation and learning strategies, Aprendizaje complejo: el papel del conocimiento, la inteligencia, motivación y estrategias de aprendizaje Castejón Costa, Juan Luis - Gilar Corbi, Raquel - Pérez Sánchez, Antonio Miguel
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Evaluating knowledge-based approaches to the multilingual extension of a temporal expression normalizer Negri, Matteo - Saquete Boró, Estela - Martínez Barco, Patricio - Muñoz Guillena, Rafael
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Multilingual extension of a temporal expression normalizer using annotated corpora Saquete Boró, Estela - Martínez Barco, Patricio - Muñoz Guillena, Rafael - Negri, Matteo - Speranza, Manuela - Sprugnoli, Rachele
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4.
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A knowledge-based textual entailment approach applied to the QA answer validation at CLEF 2006 Ferrández Escámez, Óscar - Muñoz Terol, Rafael - Muñoz Guillena, Rafael - Martínez Barco, Patricio - Palomar Sanz, Manuel
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5.
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Words and patterns: lexico-grammatical patterns and semantic relations in domain-specific discourses Orna-Montesinos, Concepción
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Postmodernist narrative: in search of an alternative Crews, Brian
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EMOCause: an easy-adaptable approach to emotion cause contexts Russo, Irene - Caselli, Tommaso - Rubino, Francesco - Boldrini, Ester - Martínez Barco, Patricio
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Using ontologies for the design of data warehouses Pardillo Vela, Jesús - Mazón López, José Norberto
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The effect of dictionary training in the teaching of English as a foreign language Cote González, Margarita - Tejedor Martínez, Cristina
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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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