Language, Band 57George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1981 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
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Seite 386
... color terms , the color categories encoded would have foci corresponding closely to those of the English categories BLACK and WHITE . Languages that contained three basic color terms always encoded color categories whose foci corre ...
... color terms , the color categories encoded would have foci corresponding closely to those of the English categories BLACK and WHITE . Languages that contained three basic color terms always encoded color categories whose foci corre ...
Seite 398
... color terms were given was counter - balanced across participants . As can be seen from the results presented in Table 5 , virtually all the par- ticipants answered that the chip better exemplified the non - basic color being tested ...
... color terms were given was counter - balanced across participants . As can be seen from the results presented in Table 5 , virtually all the par- ticipants answered that the chip better exemplified the non - basic color being tested ...
Seite 399
... color should be assigned to the Y ( dominant ) slot . For the reference - point task , we predicted that pairs of colors should seem subjectively more similar when the non - basic color was compared to the basic ( reference point ) than ...
... color should be assigned to the Y ( dominant ) slot . For the reference - point task , we predicted that pairs of colors should seem subjectively more similar when the non - basic color was compared to the basic ( reference point ) than ...
Inhalt
Anthony J Naro | 63 |
Halle and P Kiparsky | 150 |
Resolving the Neogrammarian controversy | 267 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent addition alternative analysis appear argument basic boundaries Chap claim Class clauses color communication comparative considered contains contrast deletion derived described dialects diffusion direct discussion distinction drift effect elements English event evidence example existence explanation fact factors FIGURE forms French function German give given grammar important indicate interesting interpretation involved Jewish Jewish languages John language lexical linguistic marked meaning names natural object occur original particular pattern person phonetic phonological position possible present Press problem proposed question reason reference relative represents rules semantic sentences sharings similar Slavic social sound speakers speech standard stems stress structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table tense theory University variation verb volume vowel Yiddish York