Language, Band 62,Ausgaben 2-4Linguistic Society of America, 1986 |
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Ergebnisse 1-3 von 78
Seite 420
... individuals ( which serve as denotations for conjuncts , e.g. the subject of George and Mar- tha hate each other ) , as well as individual sums of singular objects or groups . Individual sums are different from sets in that they are ...
... individuals ( which serve as denotations for conjuncts , e.g. the subject of George and Mar- tha hate each other ) , as well as individual sums of singular objects or groups . Individual sums are different from sets in that they are ...
Seite 591
... individual ' frame of reference ( based on Falk 1979 ) , ' and ' susceptibility ' vs. ' non - susceptibility ' to change , proved to be the most adequate to explain the choice between ser and estar , and the tilt toward estar in ...
... individual ' frame of reference ( based on Falk 1979 ) , ' and ' susceptibility ' vs. ' non - susceptibility ' to change , proved to be the most adequate to explain the choice between ser and estar , and the tilt toward estar in ...
Seite 595
... individual frame - blurs the distinction between class and individual frame , and leads speakers to de- focus on this constraint . At this stage , the focus is on the use of estar to in- troduce attributes which are circumstantial and ...
... individual frame - blurs the distinction between class and individual frame , and leads speakers to de- focus on this constraint . At this stage , the focus is on the use of estar to in- troduce attributes which are circumstantial and ...
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American analysis appear apply approach argues aspect associated claims clauses clitic comparative consider constraints constructions contains context contrast creole defined derived dialects discourse discussion distinction English evidence examples expressions fact factors final forms French function give given grammar historical hypothesis important individual interesting interpretation involve issues John language less lexical linguistic mark meaning names nature noted notion noun object occur past person phonological phrase position possible predicts present Press principle problems pronoun properties proposed provides question reading reference relations relative represent requires respect rule semantic sentences similar single situation social speakers specific speech Stage structure suggests syntactic syntax tense theory tones types University verb volume vowel writing