Language, Band 58,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1982 |
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Seite 692
... involved in the diffusion of linguistic innovations . I hope that this book will give an impetus to other investigations using some of the techniques detailed here . C & T's final chapter , ' Towards geolinguistics ' , addresses the ...
... involved in the diffusion of linguistic innovations . I hope that this book will give an impetus to other investigations using some of the techniques detailed here . C & T's final chapter , ' Towards geolinguistics ' , addresses the ...
Seite 825
... involved causer is signaled by the suffix -vaa on the verb . If the term CAUSEE is used for that NP in these ... involved causer ] -aa -aa + -koo [ -involved causer ] -vaa -vaa + -koo [ -aff . causee ] -aa + -see -see -vaa -see The ...
... involved causer is signaled by the suffix -vaa on the verb . If the term CAUSEE is used for that NP in these ... involved causer ] -aa -aa + -koo [ -involved causer ] -vaa -vaa + -koo [ -aff . causee ] -aa + -see -see -vaa -see The ...
Seite 829
... INVOLVED CAUSER . Since existing grammars do not describe causative semantics in terms of causer involvement , it is difficult to provide direct evi- dence for the significance of this notion in existing grammars of other languages ...
... INVOLVED CAUSER . Since existing grammars do not describe causative semantics in terms of causer involvement , it is difficult to provide direct evi- dence for the significance of this notion in existing grammars of other languages ...
Inhalt
Intonation and its parts Dwight Bolinger | 505 |
The analysis of French shwa Stephen R Anderson | 534 |
Prosodic structure and Expletive Infixation John J McCarthy | 574 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action affected agent allow alternations analysis appear apply aspect assume auxiliary boundary cause Chap claim concerned considered consonant construction contains context contrast course deletion described dialect discussion distinct English ergative evidence examples existence expression fact final formal French function further give given grammar implies important Infixation initial instances interesting interpretation involved John language lexical linguistic look marked meaning modals morphological nasal natural noted nouns object observed occur particular person phonetic phonology plural position possible preceding predict present Press principles problem processes proposed question reference requires respect restricted result rule seen segments semantic sentences shwa speakers speech stress structure suggest syllable syntactic syntax Table tense theory transitive treated types University verb vowel York