Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 82
Seite 96
For example , sentences of the kind adduced in the title of this article are not used in French , German , or Russian . In French , sentences like Les garçons sont les ( des ? ) garçons ( The ) boys are ( the ) boys ' , or Les garçons ...
For example , sentences of the kind adduced in the title of this article are not used in French , German , or Russian . In French , sentences like Les garçons sont les ( des ? ) garçons ( The ) boys are ( the ) boys ' , or Les garçons ...
Seite 102
Turning now to sentences like Either John will come or he won't , I would agree with the gist of Levinson's interpretation ( “ Calm down , there is no point in worrying about whether he's going to come because there is nothing we can do ...
Turning now to sentences like Either John will come or he won't , I would agree with the gist of Levinson's interpretation ( “ Calm down , there is no point in worrying about whether he's going to come because there is nothing we can do ...
Seite 172
A complexity profile results by moving across the sentence to be parsed , summing the nonterminal load of three adjacent ... Since holding syntactic information in memory necessarily contributes to difficulty in processing sentences ...
A complexity profile results by moving across the sentence to be parsed , summing the nonterminal load of three adjacent ... Since holding syntactic information in memory necessarily contributes to difficulty in processing sentences ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Inhalt
The lexicon Victoria A Fromkin 1 | 23 |
Nouns and verbs Ronald W Langacker | 53 |
Boys will be boys Anna Wierzbicka | 95 |
Urheberrecht | |
3 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accepted analysis antecedent appear approach argues argument aspect assigned assume basic bounded claim clause cognitive complement concerned consider consistent construction contains continuity contrast derivational dialect discourse discussion distinction domain elements English examples expressions fact FIGURE formal function genitive given gives governed grammar important indicate interesting interpretation John kind language lexical linguistic marked meaning morphology nature nominal notes noun NP's object occur particular patterns phonology phrase position possible pragmatic predication present Press principles problem pronoun proposed question reading reference relation relative relevant representation requires rules seems semantic sentences shows situation social speakers specific speech structure suggests syntactic syntax theory topic University verbs volume vowel