Language, Band 50,Ausgabe 4Linguistic Society of America, 1974 |
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Seite 635
Tough Movement replaces a subject complement clause with its object , thereby relating pairs of sentences like these : ( 15 ) To catch poltergeists is tough . ( 16 ) Poltergeists are tough to catch . This rule applies to a restricted ...
Tough Movement replaces a subject complement clause with its object , thereby relating pairs of sentences like these : ( 15 ) To catch poltergeists is tough . ( 16 ) Poltergeists are tough to catch . This rule applies to a restricted ...
Seite 639
... Movement ( cf. Postal 1971 ) , which topicalizes a noun phrase by fronting it , producing sentences like ( 34 ) Lobster my cat will eat . In sentences consisting of only one clause , the raising character of Y Movement is debatable ...
... Movement ( cf. Postal 1971 ) , which topicalizes a noun phrase by fronting it , producing sentences like ( 34 ) Lobster my cat will eat . In sentences consisting of only one clause , the raising character of Y Movement is debatable ...
Seite 652
... Movement leave a subordinate clause behind ) . Because of this combina- tion of circumstances , both rules have the ... movement rules serve to make the objective content of sentences more prominent . 4.4 . FRONTING RULES . The fronting ...
... Movement leave a subordinate clause behind ) . Because of this combina- tion of circumstances , both rules have the ... movement rules serve to make the objective content of sentences more prominent . 4.4 . FRONTING RULES . The fronting ...
Inhalt
Half a century of the Linguistic Society | 619 |
Movement rules in functional perspective | 630 |
Indefiniteness and anaphoricity | 665 |
Urheberrecht | |
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active alternative American analysis appear apply Arabic aspects Campbell claim clause comparative completion Condition consonants constraints construction conversation derived determinant dialects dictionary discussion E. H. Sturtevant English Etymology evidence example fact forms fronting function Germanic grammar Greek historical Hittite indicates Indo-European initial interest introduction language Latin least Lehmann linguistics lowering material meaning Movement Obituary objective content observations occurs operation organization origin parties person phonemes phonology position possible predicates present Press problem prominence Proto-Indo-European question R. A. Hall Jr R. G. Kent raising reading reference relation relative Relevancy rhymes root rules selects semantic sentence Society Spanish speaker speech Sprache Stahlke stress structure surface syntactic syntax talk techniques theory transformational turn turn-taking system University variable verb vowel