Language, Band 44,Ausgabe 2,Teile 1-3Linguistic Society of America, 1968 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 82
Seite 467
... language change . Relevant instances are cited from the Germanic languages where near - homonymy has resulted in ... language are considered . Linguists have long recognized that homonymy , in addition to its synchronic bearing on the ...
... language change . Relevant instances are cited from the Germanic languages where near - homonymy has resulted in ... language are considered . Linguists have long recognized that homonymy , in addition to its synchronic bearing on the ...
Seite 614
... language , but there is every reason to believe that they have influenced the development of language in important ways . This is implicit in many of the ex- planations advanced for various kinds of historical change in language ...
... language , but there is every reason to believe that they have influenced the development of language in important ways . This is implicit in many of the ex- planations advanced for various kinds of historical change in language ...
Seite 676
... language . This particular issue is best approached in terms of the earlier discussion of Sapir's notion of the ' genius ' of a language , and the suggestion that this notion may be explicated from the perspective of a typological ...
... language . This particular issue is best approached in terms of the earlier discussion of Sapir's notion of the ' genius ' of a language , and the suggestion that this notion may be explicated from the perspective of a typological ...
Inhalt
Grimms Law in distinctive features | 224 |
The passive construction in English | 230 |
English relativization and certain related problems | 244 |
Urheberrecht | |
5 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
alternation American analysis Angeles appear apply Assistant Professor Associate Professor base Calif Cambridge Canada Center Chicago clear cluster College common considered consonant contains definite Department derived dialects discussion distinction element ending example fact final function further German given gives grammar Hall indicate initial Institute Italy Japan John language Library Linguistics Mary Mass meaning Member Michigan morphophonemic names noted noun occur Ph.D phonemic phonological phrase position possible preceding present problem Professor of English question reason reference reflex relative represented Research result ROBERT Romance rules School seems semantic sentences Society stops structure style syntactic Texas theory tion Tokyo transformation University University of California verb voiced vowel Washington York