Language, Band 53,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1977 |
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Seite 344
... deletion , e.g. haf ; other verbs strongly favor its deletion , e.g. waan . Precisely the same phenomenon occurs in Standard English . Certain modal verbs like can require to - deletion ; other modal ( or quasi - modal ) verbs like dare ...
... deletion , e.g. haf ; other verbs strongly favor its deletion , e.g. waan . Precisely the same phenomenon occurs in Standard English . Certain modal verbs like can require to - deletion ; other modal ( or quasi - modal ) verbs like dare ...
Seite 355
... deletion is almost certainly an exaggerated one . In any case , W's belief that fi - deletion is somehow ' horizontal ' to the ' vertical ' dimension of fi - replacement could only be justified if he could show that deletion was a ...
... deletion is almost certainly an exaggerated one . In any case , W's belief that fi - deletion is somehow ' horizontal ' to the ' vertical ' dimension of fi - replacement could only be justified if he could show that deletion was a ...
Seite 356
... deletion and the position of speakers in the continuum . For example , while waan favors deletion at all levels of the continuum ( only two of 22 speakers fail to apply it ) , staat shows only one deletion by a single speaker out of the ...
... deletion and the position of speakers in the continuum . For example , while waan favors deletion at all levels of the continuum ( only two of 22 speakers fail to apply it ) , staat shows only one deletion by a single speaker out of the ...
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acceptable alternative analysis appears apply argues arguments associated chapter choice claim classifier clauses clear complementizer complete conclusion consider constituents constraints constructions contains definite deletion derived discussion distinction English environments evidence example existence explanation expressed fact final function given gives grammar historical important indicative initial interesting internal interpretation involves John kind language least lexical linguistic Mary meaning natural notes notion noun object occur paradigm particular perspective phonological phrases position possible predict present Press principle problem proposal question reason refer regard relations relative repair representation respect result Reviewed rules seems semantic sense sentences similar speakers specific structure suggests surface syntactic theory tion transformations turn University variation various verbs vowel