Language, Band 62,Ausgaben 2-4Linguistic Society of America, 1986 |
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Seite 397
... occur with the features of Factor 4 , whereas features hypothesized as opposing in- tegration ( such as conjoined clauses ) should occur in a complementary pattern . The communicative function shared by the features on Factor 5 ...
... occur with the features of Factor 4 , whereas features hypothesized as opposing in- tegration ( such as conjoined clauses ) should occur in a complementary pattern . The communicative function shared by the features on Factor 5 ...
Seite 571
... occurs after the past tense category . But the situation is much more complex than he indicates , since some forms with modal meaning occur before and after tense , and some aspectuals occur before certain modal items . I will ...
... occurs after the past tense category . But the situation is much more complex than he indicates , since some forms with modal meaning occur before and after tense , and some aspectuals occur before certain modal items . I will ...
Seite 753
... occur in that position . Wasow's Generalization is motivated by facts which concern subcategori- zation , and the claims it makes are crucially linked to specific claims about the subcategorization of particular lexical items . The ...
... occur in that position . Wasow's Generalization is motivated by facts which concern subcategori- zation , and the claims it makes are crucially linked to specific claims about the subcategorization of particular lexical items . The ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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