Language, Band 83,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 2007 |
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Seite 24
... less regular ( and the suppletion is therefore less canonical ) than instances for some types of noun . Furthermore , there are many exam- ples , from different language families , of personal pronouns showing fully regular inflection ...
... less regular ( and the suppletion is therefore less canonical ) than instances for some types of noun . Furthermore , there are many exam- ples , from different language families , of personal pronouns showing fully regular inflection ...
Seite 132
... less acceptable than unembedded ones . Single embedding seems to have a much weaker effect on acceptability ; singly embedded that - clauses were less acceptable than unembedded ones ; this effect was significant only by subjects and ...
... less acceptable than unembedded ones . Single embedding seems to have a much weaker effect on acceptability ; singly embedded that - clauses were less acceptable than unembedded ones ; this effect was significant only by subjects and ...
Seite 308
... less marked is the onset cluster C1C2 ( e.g. Greenberg 1978 , Selkirk 1984 ) .42 This would mean that TW is less marked than T - liquid and that the SC clusters toward the right in 20 are less marked than those toward the left ...
... less marked is the onset cluster C1C2 ( e.g. Greenberg 1978 , Selkirk 1984 ) .42 This would mean that TW is less marked than T - liquid and that the SC clusters toward the right in 20 are less marked than those toward the left ...
Inhalt
HanZangyu tonyuanci yanjiu vol 1 HanZangyu | 1 |
Paying tribute Brian D Joseph | 5 |
Free prefix ordering in Chintang Balthasar Bickel Goma Banjade Martin Gaenszle | 43 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acceptability analysis appear approach argues argument associated assume authors Cambridge chapter claims clauses clusters complex condition consider constraint constructions contrast demonstrative described dialect discourse discussion distinction distribution effect embedding English evidence example experiment fact focus forms frequency function further give given grammar Greek important indicates inflectional instance interaction interesting interpretation involved islands issue John language less lexical linguistic marking meaning morphology nature Note object pattern person Peter phonetic phonological pitch accent plural position possible prediction prefixes present Press processing pronominals provides questions reference relative clauses resumption semantic sentences significant similar single sounds speakers specific speech split stem strategy structure subjects suggests suppletion syntactic Table tense theory tion University values verb volume vowel