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By contrast , in German and English , pronominals induce severe unacceptability equal to strong - island violations . ... This contrasts with German and Greek , where intrusive pronouns can be as acceptable as gaps .
By contrast , in German and English , pronominals induce severe unacceptability equal to strong - island violations . ... This contrasts with German and Greek , where intrusive pronouns can be as acceptable as gaps .
Seite 149
In German , by contrast , CP extraposition makes embedded gaps worse than in any of the three languages . Absence of CLLD and CP extraposition leaves English with relatively acceptable embedded gaps and unacceptable pronominals ; as a ...
In German , by contrast , CP extraposition makes embedded gaps worse than in any of the three languages . Absence of CLLD and CP extraposition leaves English with relatively acceptable embedded gaps and unacceptable pronominals ; as a ...
Seite 464
a Production , perception , and emergent Finally , a typological comparison reveals the same phonotactic patterns : A case of conasymmetry - many languages that maintain plain / palatalized contrast in the onset position lose it in ...
a Production , perception , and emergent Finally , a typological comparison reveals the same phonotactic patterns : A case of conasymmetry - many languages that maintain plain / palatalized contrast in the onset position lose it in ...
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Inhalt
Paying tribute Brian D Joseph | 5 |
Free prefix ordering in Chintang Balthasar Bickel Goma Banjade Martin Gaenszle | 43 |
A case study Gerhard Jäger | 74 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acceptable alliteration analysis appear approach argues argument associated authors Cambridge chapter claims clauses clusters complex condition consider constraint constructions context contrast demonstrative described dialect discourse discussion distinction effect embedding English evidence example experiment fact Figure focus forms frequency function further give given grammar historical important indicates interaction interesting interpretation involved islands issue John language less lexical linguistic marking meaning morphology nature noted object pattern person Peter phonetic phonological pitch accent position possible predicted prefixes present Press properties provides questions reference relative resumption semantic sentence significant similar social sounds speakers specific speech split stem strategy structure subjects suggests suppletion syllable syntactic Table tense theory tion University values variation verb volume vowel