Language, Band 70,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1994 |
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... syntactic structure ; rather , the syntax is subject to various types of adjustments which convert it into a suitable input for the phonology . This adjusted syntactic structure is prosodic structure . A famous example of nonisomorphism ...
... syntactic structure ; rather , the syntax is subject to various types of adjustments which convert it into a suitable input for the phonology . This adjusted syntactic structure is prosodic structure . A famous example of nonisomorphism ...
Seite 89
... syntactic object of an active transitive verb and the syntactic subject of the passive transitive verb . And in both languages intransitive verbs like be , sit , and come have the theme as the subject , but allow it to appear in the ...
... syntactic object of an active transitive verb and the syntactic subject of the passive transitive verb . And in both languages intransitive verbs like be , sit , and come have the theme as the subject , but allow it to appear in the ...
Seite 104
... syntactic con- figurations of presentationally focussed objects - see §4.4 above . ) In English the inverted locative is not a subject at the level of c - structure and cannot occupy the NP subject position ( see Figure 3 ) . In ...
... syntactic con- figurations of presentationally focussed objects - see §4.4 above . ) In English the inverted locative is not a subject at the level of c - structure and cannot occupy the NP subject position ( see Figure 3 ) . In ...
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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