Language, Band 73,Ausgaben 1-2Linguistic Society of America, 1997 |
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Seite 34
... sentences with a sentence - initial and sentence - final wн - element can be gener- ated in the following way : the sentence - initial wн - element is a topic , and the final wH - element is either in situ or moved to the rightward spec ...
... sentences with a sentence - initial and sentence - final wн - element can be gener- ated in the following way : the sentence - initial wн - element is a topic , and the final wH - element is either in situ or moved to the rightward spec ...
Seite 48
... sentence which are recoverable from a previous sentence in the discourse . We believe the ASL examples can be explained as a type of sluicing . We take the sentences in 100 and 101 to be further examples of this phenome- non : one ...
... sentence which are recoverable from a previous sentence in the discourse . We believe the ASL examples can be explained as a type of sluicing . We take the sentences in 100 and 101 to be further examples of this phenome- non : one ...
Seite 49
We now claim that 102b and 103b are two - sentence discourses , similar to 102a and 103a.30 The only difference is that in the ( b ) examples , a null argument is used in the first sentence . It has independently been argued that null ...
We now claim that 102b and 103b are two - sentence discourses , similar to 102a and 103a.30 The only difference is that in the ( b ) examples , a null argument is used in the first sentence . It has independently been argued that null ...
Inhalt
American Sign Language | 18 |
Apropos | 58 |
Geoffrey K Pullum | 79 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accented addition affix American analysis appear apply approach argues argument assimilation blocking Cambridge chapter claim clause complete condition consistent constraints construction context contrast derived described discourse discussion effects elements English evidence example fact final forms frames function gestural given grammar head historical illustrated important indicate inflection interpretation involved issues John language lexical linguistic marked marker meaning morphology nature noted nouns object occur original paradigm patterns phonetic phonology phrase plural position possible present Press problem processing productions pronouns proposed prosodic provides questions refer representation represented result rule semantic sentence sequence shown speakers specific speech stem stress structure suffix syllable syntactic syntax Table theory tion topic trochaic University values verb volume vowel words