Language, Band 65,Ausgaben 3-4Linguistic Society of America, 1989 |
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Seite 631
... claim that sentences like 3 have the pragmatic force of ' Ali I KNOW ' , where waa indicates that the verb ' know ' is in focus . In contrast , S claims that these sentences have no focus at all ; rather , waa is simply a declarative ...
... claim that sentences like 3 have the pragmatic force of ' Ali I KNOW ' , where waa indicates that the verb ' know ' is in focus . In contrast , S claims that these sentences have no focus at all ; rather , waa is simply a declarative ...
Seite 656
... claim that this results from a reinterpretation of an original Indo - European bisentential construction is fanciful and uncon- vincing . Others debate whether the ' statal pas- sive ' is really a passive : FRITZ HERMANNS claims that it ...
... claim that this results from a reinterpretation of an original Indo - European bisentential construction is fanciful and uncon- vincing . Others debate whether the ' statal pas- sive ' is really a passive : FRITZ HERMANNS claims that it ...
Seite 740
... claim that , in English , in- version structures arise with unaccusative verbs is not surprising if some of the insights on Italian inversion are adapted to the English case . Burzio ( 1986 : Ch . 2 ) devotes a section to postverbal ...
... claim that , in English , in- version structures arise with unaccusative verbs is not surprising if some of the insights on Italian inversion are adapted to the English case . Burzio ( 1986 : Ch . 2 ) devotes a section to postverbal ...
Inhalt
Elucidation of | 457 |
American English spelling | 487 |
Saussurean studiesEtudes saussuriennes | 518 |
Urheberrecht | |
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agreement analysis appear approach argues argument argument structure called century chapter claim clause clitic Cloth communication condition consider constructions contains context contrast dependent described dimension direct discourse discussion distinction duration effect English evidence example expressions fact final French function genres German gerund given grammar head historical illustrate important indicates initial interesting interpretation inversion involved issues John language letters lexical linguistic marked Mary meaning nasal nature nominal notes noun object occur oral original particular period person phrase plural position possible present Press principles problem pronoun properties proposed Propositional provides question reader reading reference reflexive relation relatively represent require rules semantic sentence shows social speakers speech structure style suggests syntactic syntax texts theory topic University verb volume vowels York