Documents found

  1. 161.

    Gravel, Jean-Philippe

    Bildungsroman

    Article published in Ciné-Bulles (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Volume 37, Issue 2, 2019

    Digital publication year: 2019

  2. 162.

    Article published in 24 images (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 204, 2022

    Digital publication year: 2022

  3. 163.

    Article published in L'Actualité économique (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 71, Issue 4, 1995

    Digital publication year: 2009

    More information

    ABSTRACTUsing data from the United States and other industrialized countries, Fama and Schwert (1977) and Solnik (1983) found that stock markets performed poorly during periods of inflation. In their studies stock market returns were negatively correlated with inflation. This paper evaluates whether Fama and Schwert's results apply to some developing countries. The relationship between inflation (expected and unexpected) and stock market returns is tested correcting for the presence of heteroscedasticity and accounting for important events affecting stock market prices. The empirical evidence indicates that the fiscal regime in a country is important for a positive relation to exist between stock market returns and inflation.

  4. 164.

    Article published in Meta (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 61, 2016

    Digital publication year: 2017

    More information

    This paper aims to show, through a diachronical study, how concepts imported from Western civilization were named in South-East Asia, through the help of dictionaries and a huge database of ancient Japanese and Korean texts. This study is part of a research project specializing on Korean, Japanese and Chinese neology. The terminology used in this study is indissociable from the sociopolitical context. Neology, first introduced by the missionaries in the 17th century and continued in the 19th century, led to the creation of religious as well as scientific terms. However, for the sake of modernization, it is Japan who contributed the most to scientific neology, first through its contact with the Dutch, and more thoroughly at the period of “the Opening” to the West at the end of the 19th Century. In addition to Japan, other countries followed a parallel evolution in the creation of neologisms using the same processes of lexical creation, but to lesser extents, especially for religious terms and words related to everyday life. However, for scientific terms, the Chinese, Koreans and Vietnamese borrowed heavily from the Japanese, via translation or retranslation of Western works translated into Japanese.The abandonment of Chinese words in favor of Japanese neologisms not only by the Koreans but also by the Chinese themselves, and the preference of the Japanese for phonetic loans can be attributed to the defeat of China in the Sino-Japanese War (1895) as well as by the innovative and attractive nature of Japanese neologisms. Ultimately, for the sake of linguistic identity, the Chinese, and especially the Vietnamese after 1919, conceived their own neologisms.

    Keywords: néologisme, emprunt, création lexicale, termes scientifiques, Asie du Sud-Est, neologism, loan word, lexical creation, scientific terms, South-East Asia

  5. 165.

    Chaput, Luc

    Claude Lanzmann

    Article published in Séquences : la revue de cinéma (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Issue 316, 2018

    Digital publication year: 2019

  6. 167.

    Clas, André

    Éditorial

    Other published in Meta (scholarly, collection Érudit)

    Volume 28, Issue 2, 1983

    Digital publication year: 2002

  7. 170.

    Ferraris, Nathalie

    Josée Bisaillon

    Article published in Lurelu (cultural, collection Érudit)

    Volume 37, Issue 3, 2015

    Digital publication year: 2014