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to be specificational — hence not equatives at all — and demonstrative equatives to be equatives proper . We maintain that Higgins was right to categorize the two together ; however , it is our contention that both types belong in the ...
to be specificational — hence not equatives at all — and demonstrative equatives to be equatives proper . We maintain that Higgins was right to categorize the two together ; however , it is our contention that both types belong in the ...
Seite 333
Here , the demonstrative is singular ( as is the copula , in agreement with the demonstrative ) , yet the postcopular NP is plural . Again , as with TWBX , this result is unsurprising under an account in which the demonstrative takes ...
Here , the demonstrative is singular ( as is the copula , in agreement with the demonstrative ) , yet the postcopular NP is plural . Again , as with TWBX , this result is unsurprising under an account in which the demonstrative takes ...
Seite 334
that again these properties fall out naturally under an account in which the demonstrative can be used to refer to the instantiation of the OP variable . Now notice that when the demonstrative subject is used for spatial deixis ...
that again these properties fall out naturally under an account in which the demonstrative can be used to refer to the instantiation of the OP variable . Now notice that when the demonstrative subject is used for spatial deixis ...
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Inhalt
Language in the USA Themes for | 883 |
Forensic linguistics An introduction to language crime and the law P Newman | 899 |
Recent Publications | 926 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acceptable analysis appear approach argues argument associated authors Cambridge chapter claims clauses clusters comparative complex condition consider constraint constructions contains contrast demonstrative described dialect discourse discussion distinction distribution effect embedding English event evidence example experiment expressions fact Figure focus four functional further given grammar important inflectional interesting interpretation introduction involved issue John language least less lexical linguistic marking meaning morphology natural noted past pattern person phonetic phonological phrase pitch accent position possible present Press properties proposed provides question reading reference relative resumption semantic sentence similar social sounds speakers specific speech stem strategy structure suffixes suggests suppletion syntactic Table tense theory tion University values variable variation verb volume vowel