Language, Band 77,Ausgaben 1-2Linguistic Society of America, 2001 |
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Seite 114
MODALIZED SENTENCES 10 ( 35 ) If he is guilty can be shown by our evidence . ( 36 ) At the court proceedings , we could say if he was at the scene of the crime.11 GENERIC SENTENCES ( 37 ) Priests get to hear if someone has sinned ...
MODALIZED SENTENCES 10 ( 35 ) If he is guilty can be shown by our evidence . ( 36 ) At the court proceedings , we could say if he was at the scene of the crime.11 GENERIC SENTENCES ( 37 ) Priests get to hear if someone has sinned ...
Seite 134
... sentences . They proposed instead an expert system based on the interaction of syntactic and other principles that ... sentences are unacceptable ; b . there are ambiguous sentences that their analysis predicts to be unambigu- ous ; and ...
... sentences . They proposed instead an expert system based on the interaction of syntactic and other principles that ... sentences are unacceptable ; b . there are ambiguous sentences that their analysis predicts to be unambigu- ous ; and ...
Seite 142
... sentences that first come to mind . Some or all of these sentences may be unambiguous / unacceptable for nonsyntactic reasons , and sentences of the same pattern might be ambiguous / acceptable if they were free from the nonsyntactic ...
... sentences that first come to mind . Some or all of these sentences may be unambiguous / unacceptable for nonsyntactic reasons , and sentences of the same pattern might be ambiguous / acceptable if they were free from the nonsyntactic ...
Inhalt
Abschnitt 1 | 1 |
Abschnitt 2 | 26 |
Abschnitt 3 | 61 |
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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