Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 85
Seite 267
So the verbs appear , hit , and feel occur in the following patterns : ( a ) He appeared a fool . He appeared sick . Not : He appeared him ( minimally stressed him ) . ( b ) He hit a fool . He hit him . Not : He hit sick .
So the verbs appear , hit , and feel occur in the following patterns : ( a ) He appeared a fool . He appeared sick . Not : He appeared him ( minimally stressed him ) . ( b ) He hit a fool . He hit him . Not : He hit sick .
Seite 300
do not change , except that in the subset of conditions mentioned above the auxiliary changes place with the preceding N. This and other considerations which will appear in 882.5 , 6 suggest that the -s , -ed be considered affixes of ...
do not change , except that in the subset of conditions mentioned above the auxiliary changes place with the preceding N. This and other considerations which will appear in 882.5 , 6 suggest that the -s , -ed be considered affixes of ...
Seite 314
In some sentence combinations there are positions in which a recurring morpheme appears either in full or as zero . ... In some positions the recurring morphemes may appear either in full , in pro - morpheme , or in zero forms , as is ...
In some sentence combinations there are positions in which a recurring morpheme appears either in full or as zero . ... In some positions the recurring morphemes may appear either in full , in pro - morpheme , or in zero forms , as is ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Inhalt
I | 1 |
The first person singular verbal endings in IndoEuropean | 19 |
Abdominal pulse types in some Peruvian languages | 30 |
24 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
allophones American analysis appear Associate assume called College combinations common comparative complete considered consonants construction contains contrast derived described dialect discussion distinction distribution elements endings English evidence example fact final forms French German give given grammar important indicate instance Institute interest interpretation kind language laryngeal Latin least Library linguistic material matter meaning Michigan morpheme names noun object occur original particular pattern Persian Ph.D phonemes position possible preceding present probably problem Professor publications question reference relation represent result seems sentence sequence short similar Society sound speakers speech statement stress structure suffix syllable texts theory tion transformations University variant various verb vowel writing written York zero