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MORPHOLOGICAL CLASSES AS NATURAL CATEGORIES Joan L. BYBEE and Carol LYNN MODER State University of New York at Buffalo a The most productive class of strong verbs in English is that exemplified by the verb string / strung .
MORPHOLOGICAL CLASSES AS NATURAL CATEGORIES Joan L. BYBEE and Carol LYNN MODER State University of New York at Buffalo a The most productive class of strong verbs in English is that exemplified by the verb string / strung .
Seite 400
Probably all the techniques used in these papers , and in many other works on natural - language quantification , are either extensions or applications of techniques developed in formal logicor are devices introduced in order to ...
Probably all the techniques used in these papers , and in many other works on natural - language quantification , are either extensions or applications of techniques developed in formal logicor are devices introduced in order to ...
Seite 401
Grammars written by linguists may provide a way of translating the natural language into such a representation . However , in a complete computer natural - language system , one not only needs a way of translating from the natural ...
Grammars written by linguists may provide a way of translating the natural language into such a representation . However , in a complete computer natural - language system , one not only needs a way of translating from the natural ...
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Inhalt
Sound change in perception and production Tore Janson | 18 |
Transderivational relationships in Chamorro phonology Sandra Chung | 35 |
Generative tests for generative meter Gilbert Youmans | 67 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acceptable analysis appear apply approach argues argument Assignment assume Chap claim communication complex concerned consider constituent constructions contains context contrastive defined definition deletion derivation dialect discourse discussion English evidence examples exist expressions fact FIGURE final focus formal French function German give given grammar historical important interesting interpretation introduced inversions involved issues John kind language lexical lines linguistic logical meaning metrical movement natural norm Note noun object occur particular phonological phrase position possible present Press problem production proposal question reference relation relative represent responses rules seems semantics sense sentences social sound speakers speech stress structure suggests syllables syntactic syntax Table theory topic University variants verbs volume vowel York