Language, Band 53,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1977 |
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Seite 108
... internal . We will refer to such sentences as the ' Non - Internal Clause ' examples , 3 and we will show below how they can be accounted for by the generaliza- tion used for 1-8 . We have shown , then , that Ross's 1967 proposal is ...
... internal . We will refer to such sentences as the ' Non - Internal Clause ' examples , 3 and we will show below how they can be accounted for by the generaliza- tion used for 1-8 . We have shown , then , that Ross's 1967 proposal is ...
Seite 112
... internal NP that exhaustively dominates S are ungrammatical ( where a constituent is internal if it is neither the leftmost nor the rightmost member of its immediate parent con- stituent ) . Now , since the NP - over - S that Mary was a ...
... internal NP that exhaustively dominates S are ungrammatical ( where a constituent is internal if it is neither the leftmost nor the rightmost member of its immediate parent con- stituent ) . Now , since the NP - over - S that Mary was a ...
Seite 128
... internal structure ( or - as Ross 1973 would say - with a specific degree of ' nouni- ness ' ) can function just like non - coördinate NP's with that particular structure . This fact is not in the least surprising , since it makes ...
... internal structure ( or - as Ross 1973 would say - with a specific degree of ' nouni- ness ' ) can function just like non - coördinate NP's with that particular structure . This fact is not in the least surprising , since it makes ...
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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