Language, Band 62,Ausgaben 2-4Linguistic Society of America, 1986 |
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Seite 428
... objects may remain unindividuated is that they may not be sufficiently distinguished from the generic object implied in the meaning of every transitive verb ; this is the point of AUSTIN'S paper . Using data from a number of ergative ...
... objects may remain unindividuated is that they may not be sufficiently distinguished from the generic object implied in the meaning of every transitive verb ; this is the point of AUSTIN'S paper . Using data from a number of ergative ...
Seite 438
... Object - types higher on this hierarchy tend to : ( i ) grammaticalize first in a language , before lower objects ; ( ii ) grammaticalize obligatorily , before lower objects ; ( iii ) appear more frequently as DO in natural discourse ...
... Object - types higher on this hierarchy tend to : ( i ) grammaticalize first in a language , before lower objects ; ( ii ) grammaticalize obligatorily , before lower objects ; ( iii ) appear more frequently as DO in natural discourse ...
Seite 840
... object . Second , advancements to object typically cause the original object to lose its ' object properties ' . The traditional account of this is that the original object has become a chômeur . But Instrumental Advancement in ...
... object . Second , advancements to object typically cause the original object to lose its ' object properties ' . The traditional account of this is that the original object has become a chômeur . But Instrumental Advancement in ...
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adjectives analysis anaphoric apply areal argues aspect associated autosegmental phonology basilect Chap clauses clitic comparative complement constructions context contrast coördination copula creole dative decreolization deletion dialects diffusion dimensions discourse discussion distinction downstep English evidence examples fact factors final forms French function geminates German grammar grammatical relations guage H-tones habitual hypothesis illocutionary illocutionary act Inalterability interpretation Irish isoglosses John language language death lexical linguistic Luca markedness Marta Mayan languages meaning mesolect modal morphemes morphological Nahuatl native notion noun NP's object Ojibwa paper phonetic phonological phrase pidgins position predicts preposition present principle problems pronominal pronoun proposed reference representation rule semantic sentences Shona situation sociolinguistic Spanish speakers specific speech structure suffix syntactic syntax tense text types theory tions tones topic University Press verb verbal vowel words