Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 89
Seite 405
lexical or morphological levels can lead to convergence . In 7 above , for instance , features of Dutch syntax such as V2 order are combined with English features such as the uninflected verb ( or bare form ga ) , and extraposition of ...
lexical or morphological levels can lead to convergence . In 7 above , for instance , features of Dutch syntax such as V2 order are combined with English features such as the uninflected verb ( or bare form ga ) , and extraposition of ...
Seite 419
He notes that lexical and lexicosyntactic transference can be explained in terms of the multiple language tagging of lexical items , which allows for selection of a lemma from either language . A lemma is that part of a lexical entry ...
He notes that lexical and lexicosyntactic transference can be explained in terms of the multiple language tagging of lexical items , which allows for selection of a lemma from either language . A lemma is that part of a lexical entry ...
Seite 439
Consequently , fine - grained phonetic detail must be part of the lexical representation and under the control of the ... and the role of frequency of the pattern in the lexicon ( type frequency ) on speech perception and on well ...
Consequently , fine - grained phonetic detail must be part of the lexical representation and under the control of the ... and the role of frequency of the pattern in the lexicon ( type frequency ) on speech perception and on well ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
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 | |
10 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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