Language, Band 45George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1969 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 76
... examples . In each example , we assume one brancher , one category , and one word ( see Table 2 ) . In the first example , the response gc1 Ride is always chosen and the utterance is always Ride . This is the bounded case with m = 1 ...
... examples . In each example , we assume one brancher , one category , and one word ( see Table 2 ) . In the first example , the response gc1 Ride is always chosen and the utterance is always Ride . This is the bounded case with m = 1 ...
Seite 171
... example , his statement , ' Until you learn to hear the difference between , for example , bed and bad ... it is practically impossible to pronounce them differently , except sometimes by luck ' ( 80 ) , may need qualification in the ...
... example , his statement , ' Until you learn to hear the difference between , for example , bed and bad ... it is practically impossible to pronounce them differently , except sometimes by luck ' ( 80 ) , may need qualification in the ...
Seite 424
... example obscures the significant semantic change which accompanies the addition of the definite article to the first example . It is paralleled in English by the difference between the comparative ' a nearer box office ' and the ...
... example obscures the significant semantic change which accompanies the addition of the definite article to the first example . It is paralleled in English by the difference between the comparative ' a nearer box office ' and the ...
Inhalt
I | 1 |
Simplicity descriptive adequacy and binary features | 26 |
Relative clauses and possessive phrases in two Australian languages | 35 |
Urheberrecht | |
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