Language, Band 77,Ausgaben 1-2Linguistic Society of America, 2001 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 84
Seite 70
... contrast between bare plurals and other types of indefinite subjects . This can be seen when comparing ( ii ) with ( iii ) : ( iii ) Er is een glas kapot . " There is a glass broken . ' While I would agree that ( ii ) is not bad in all ...
... contrast between bare plurals and other types of indefinite subjects . This can be seen when comparing ( ii ) with ( iii ) : ( iii ) Er is een glas kapot . " There is a glass broken . ' While I would agree that ( ii ) is not bad in all ...
Seite 212
... contrast , homogeneous voiceless clusters are either underlyingly voiceless , or are the result of the voice constraint , which causes delinking of privative [ voice ] before a voiceless obstruent - they will have the unlinked structure ...
... contrast , homogeneous voiceless clusters are either underlyingly voiceless , or are the result of the voice constraint , which causes delinking of privative [ voice ] before a voiceless obstruent - they will have the unlinked structure ...
Seite 220
... contrast before sonorant consonants . In the foregoing discussion we have used the lack of congruence between word - initial and word - internal clusters , and the prosodic structure of derived obstruent + sonorant clusters as evidence ...
... contrast before sonorant consonants . In the foregoing discussion we have used the lack of congruence between word - initial and word - internal clusters , and the prosodic structure of derived obstruent + sonorant clusters as evidence ...
Inhalt
Abschnitt 1 | 1 |
Abschnitt 2 | 26 |
Abschnitt 3 | 61 |
Urheberrecht | |
19 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquisition activity actually American analysis appear approach argues argument Cambridge chapter claim clause clitic clusters complement complex compounding considered consonant constraints construction contains context contrast derived determiner devoicing dialect discussion distinction early signs effects English event evidence examines example existence fact final function German gestures given grammar hand head important interaction interest interpretation involved issues John language lexical linguistic marked meaning morphology movement nature nominal Note noun object occur patterns phonology position possible predicate prelinguistic gesture present Press produced properties proposal provides question reading reason reference relation representation resultative root rule semantic sentences similar speakers specific speech structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table theory tion topic turn University verb violation voice volume vowel write