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THE PARTICIPANT NODE . H & R propose that ( Speaker ) is the default specification of the Participant node , absent unless required for contrastive purposes . A language with only two Participant categories would then have the ...
THE PARTICIPANT NODE . H & R propose that ( Speaker ) is the default specification of the Participant node , absent unless required for contrastive purposes . A language with only two Participant categories would then have the ...
Seite 712
As we have seen , transitive clauses with one third person argument and one Participant argument always have the Participant prefix ( in Ojibwa , g- or n- ) , whether the Participant is the logical subject ( direct form ) or the logical ...
As we have seen , transitive clauses with one third person argument and one Participant argument always have the Participant prefix ( in Ojibwa , g- or n- ) , whether the Participant is the logical subject ( direct form ) or the logical ...
Seite 713
Under this approach , there is no reason to treat -i as the direct suffix and -ini as the inverse suffix : it is equally possible that -ini is direct and -i inverse , or that participant - only clauses never involve inversion .
Under this approach , there is no reason to treat -i as the direct suffix and -ini as the inverse suffix : it is equally possible that -ini is direct and -i inverse , or that participant - only clauses never involve inversion .
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Inhalt
Letters to Language | 561 |
Lexicon vs syntax Kazuhiko Fukushima | 568 |
Animacy versus weight as determinants of grammatical | 613 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accepted alliteration alternation analysis animacy appear approach argues argument Cambridge claim clauses cognitive complex compounds consider construction context contrast definitive determined direct discussion distinction distribution effects English evidence example fact factors formal frequency functional German given grammar head historical human important interesting interpretation involving irregular irregular verbs issues Japanese John language lexical linguistic marking meaning morphological nature nominative Note nouns object oblique observed occur Participant patterns person phonetic phonological plural position possessor possible predicates present Press problem pronoun properties proposed provides question raising reference regular relations relative relative clauses respect role rules s-genitive semantic sentences shows similar speakers speech structure suggests syntactic syntax Table theory tion types University V-V compounds variation verbs vowel weight