Language, Band 71,Ausgaben 3-4Linguistic Society of America, 1995 |
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is the setting of parameters in language acquisition - and language acquisition is treated as a purely cognitive process . Once the language is acquired ( natively ) , with the parameters set , no external influences can affect the ...
is the setting of parameters in language acquisition - and language acquisition is treated as a purely cognitive process . Once the language is acquired ( natively ) , with the parameters set , no external influences can affect the ...
Seite 760
... acquisition . Bybee & Dahl ( 1989 ) , as well as Bybee et al . ( 1994 ) , also claim that in language change , past tense and perfective morphology often develop out of aspect markers ( resultative and perfect ) ; this closely parallels ...
... acquisition . Bybee & Dahl ( 1989 ) , as well as Bybee et al . ( 1994 ) , also claim that in language change , past tense and perfective morphology often develop out of aspect markers ( resultative and perfect ) ; this closely parallels ...
Seite 761
... acquisition . Cambridge : Cambridge University Press . Greenberg , Jeff , and Stan A. Kuczaj . 1982. Towards a theory of substantive word- meaning acquisition . Language development , Vol . 1 , Syntax and semantics , ed . by Stan A ...
... acquisition . Cambridge : Cambridge University Press . Greenberg , Jeff , and Stan A. Kuczaj . 1982. Towards a theory of substantive word- meaning acquisition . Language development , Vol . 1 , Syntax and semantics , ed . by Stan A ...
Inhalt
Autonomy and functionalist linguistics William Croft | 490 |
Book Notices see back cover | 632 |
Publications received | 661 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acquisition activity alternations analysis appear applied approach argues argument aspect Cambridge chapter Chomsky Chukchi claim clauses complete condition consider constraints constructions contains definite derived described detailed dialect direct discourse discussion distinction English evidence example explain expression fact final formal functional given grammar head human incorporation inflections interesting interpretation issues John language lexical linguistic marking meaning morphology nature nominal Note noun object Ocracoke particular past pattern phonology phrase position possible predicate present Press principles problem progressive properties provides question reading reference relation represent respect result roots rules semantic sentence simply situation social speakers speech stage structure suffix syntactic syntax tense theory tion University University Press variation verb York