"The set phrase is ` punch somebody in the nose, "'reports William Kretzschmar, working on the Linguistic Atlas Project at the University of Georgia.
12.
More importantly, however, he initiated the work for the Survey of English Dialects and compiled together with Harold Orton the " Questionnaire for a Linguistic Atlas of England ."
13.
The museum's second great project was a " Romanian Linguistic Atlas ", conceived and led by Pucariu but principally executed by two of his associates, Sever Pop and Emil Petrovici.
14.
It does not appear in the Oxford English Dictionary, in Chambers, or in the Linguistic Atlas of England " ( Orton & c, Leeds University Press, London, 1978 ) ".
15.
Another branch that developed from onomasiology and, at the same time, enriched it in turn was linguistic geography ( areal linguistics ), since it provided onomasiologists with valuable linguistic atlases.
16.
He also carried out research on Sorbian and Belarusian, and was involved in producing linguistic atlases of Kashubian ( 1964-78 ), Polish ( Nitsch 1957-70 ), and Lemkian ( 1956-64 ).
17.
Hrytsenko is the member of some international groups of International Committee of Slavists ( The Slavic Linguistic Atlas Group, Ethnolinguistics Group ), member of editorial board of �The Slavic Linguistic Atlas?
18.
Mensah and Tchagbale in their 1983 linguistic atlas of Ivory Coast include a comparative Senufo word list of about 120 items; Nafaanra is present under the name " Nafara of Bondoukou ".
19.
Before writing " Accents of English ", Wells had written a very critical review of the " Linguistic Atlas of England ", which was the principal output of the Survey of English Dialects.
20.
Concerning English linguistics, onomasiology as well as linguistic geography has been playing only a minor role ( the first linguistic atlas for the US was initiated by Hans Kurath, the first one for the UK by Eugen Dieth ).