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In the interest of cultivating a professional, academic community, I posted this question on Meta. One comment was to open a community-wiki question inviting others to contribute to a list of academic sources in the field of linguistics.

There are lots of academic resources available online for us to read, enjoy, learn from and cite. Full-text journals, journal archives, corpora, studies...

I invite you to add the resources you know of, so we can put them all in one place.

The basics:

new Q Open Wid
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mollyocr
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6 Answers6

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For citations:

Full-text journals:

Corpora:

Other primary sources:

MOOCs:

Other resources:

new Q Open Wid
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mollyocr
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The databases UPSID for phonemic inventories (web interface here) and WALS for structural properties in general. The latter allows easy exporting of data in an easily parsable format (it's also possible in the former, but it requires some twiddling).

new Q Open Wid
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Tilo Wiklund
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List of resources

WavesWashSands
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CLARIN (European Research Infrastructure for Language Resources and Technology) entry points:

  • Virtual Language Observatory (VLO): A search engine for language resources
  • TeLeMaCo: Teaching and Learning Materials Collection, a collaborative portal to teaching and learning materials
  • WebLicht: A web based chaining tools for language processing (needs a federated account for login; currently available languages are English and German)
new Q Open Wid
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Sir Cornflakes
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The Oxford Reference Encyclopedia of Linguistics, the Elsevier Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, the International Encyclopedia of Linguistics, and any Oxford, Routledge, or Wiley-Blackwell handbook on any topic in linguistics.

Julius Hamilton
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Good night! I find all the contributions very useful. Thanks a lot for sharing. I suggest you to check the following links:

https://books.google.com.mx/books?id=gPbQyRdnM18C&hl=es-419

https://books.google.com.mx/books?id=pxJGet3pKdoC&printsec=frontcover&dq=introduction+to+semantics&hl=en&sa=X&ei=0ItVU5rAFeWb3AXCtYCYDA&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=introduction%20to%20semantics&f=false

lizchimal
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  • You can improve this answer by adding some information to the pure links (that might get stale anytime), such as Author, title, publisher and year, and maybe a short comment on why they are good resources. – Sir Cornflakes Dec 11 '22 at 21:09