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 35
... inflection ( nomina- tive ) marks intransitive subject and transitive object , while another inflection ( ergative ) marks transitive subject . In Dyirbal , the genitive or possessive inflection of nouns and pronouns , -ŋu , is ...
... inflection ( nomina- tive ) marks intransitive subject and transitive object , while another inflection ( ergative ) marks transitive subject . In Dyirbal , the genitive or possessive inflection of nouns and pronouns , -ŋu , is ...
Seite 36
... inflection followed by the case inflection of the head ( possessed ) noun . Nominative case is realized by zero inflection ; ergative by a variety of morpho- phonological alternants , including -ngu after a two - syllable stem ending in ...
... inflection followed by the case inflection of the head ( possessed ) noun . Nominative case is realized by zero inflection ; ergative by a variety of morpho- phonological alternants , including -ngu after a two - syllable stem ending in ...
Seite 40
... inflections can be added to a relative clause marker , whether the marker is attached to noun or verb ; otherwise , no case inflection can be added to a case inflection . ) 2. Gumbaingar appears to show inalienable possession by ...
... inflections can be added to a relative clause marker , whether the marker is attached to noun or verb ; otherwise , no case inflection can be added to a case inflection . ) 2. Gumbaingar appears to show inalienable possession by ...
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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alternation American analysis Ann Arbor Anthropology Arabic Assistant Professor Associate Professor Austin Calif Canada CDIAL chapter Chicago Chomsky Classical College consonant Department of English Department of Linguistics dialects dictionary discussion Dyirbal English Language example forms Germanic Languages grammar Hall Hawaii inflection Institute Japan Japanese JOHN Kloss labial labial consonant lexical Loglan Macuch Mandaic Mass meaning morphemes noise Nosek noun onomatopoetic Ph.D phonetic phonological phrase predicate present Professor of English Professor of German Professor of Linguistics pronunciation prosodic reference relative clause Research Rigveda ROBERT Romance Languages rules Rumanian Ruwet Sahaptin Sanskrit School semantic sentence Slavic Languages sound change speakers speech STANFORD structure suffix syllable syntactic syntax Texas theory tion Tokyo transformational trimeter Tulu University of California utterance verb versity vowel vowel harmony Washington Webster WILLIAM words York