Language, Band 70,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1994 |
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Seite 80
... argument of which the location , change of location , or direction expressed by the locative argument is predicated - a THEME in the narrowest sense of Gruber 1976 and Jackendoff 1972 , 1976 , 1987. 10 I schematize this generalization ...
... argument of which the location , change of location , or direction expressed by the locative argument is predicated - a THEME in the narrowest sense of Gruber 1976 and Jackendoff 1972 , 1976 , 1987. 10 I schematize this generalization ...
Seite 90
... argument the subject only when there is no agent . The reason for this is that the subject function is assigned by default to the most prominent role in the argument structure , and the agent ranks in prominence above the theme and ...
... argument the subject only when there is no agent . The reason for this is that the subject function is assigned by default to the most prominent role in the argument structure , and the agent ranks in prominence above the theme and ...
Seite 118
... argument , so it agrees with the theme object , which is its highest - ranking direct argument . This insight allows us to unify the agreement patterns of English and Chichewa under a single generalization : the verb agrees with its ...
... argument , so it agrees with the theme object , which is its highest - ranking direct argument . This insight allows us to unify the agreement patterns of English and Chichewa under a single generalization : the verb agrees with its ...
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accents acquisition adjacent adverbial allow analysis appear apply approach argues argument aspects authors Cambridge chapters Chichewa child clause Cloth communication complement consider consonants constituent constraints constructions contains context contrast discourse discussion distinction element English evidence example fact final focus forms function further give given grammar historical hypothesis indicated interesting internal interpretation issues John language lexical linguistic locative inversion marked meaning nature nouns object observed occur parameter phonology phrase position possible predicate present Press principles problem processes pronouns proposed prosodic provides question reference relations representation represented role rule semantic sentences social speakers speech stress structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table theory Tiberian tone topic University verb vowel York