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Seite 77
Verb movement has the characteristics that it is usually thought to have : it moves a head from one head position to another , obeying the head - movement constraint ( Travis 1984 ) . It is always upward , moving one head to a c ...
Verb movement has the characteristics that it is usually thought to have : it moves a head from one head position to another , obeying the head - movement constraint ( Travis 1984 ) . It is always upward , moving one head to a c ...
Seite 137
First , hyperbaton disregards a number of otherwise robust syntactic conditions : it moves strings that are not constituents in the syntax , moves heads and phrases to the same position , moves them to extremely local positions ...
First , hyperbaton disregards a number of otherwise robust syntactic conditions : it moves strings that are not constituents in the syntax , moves heads and phrases to the same position , moves them to extremely local positions ...
Seite 158
( 101 ) STAYw : No daughter of w moves . Stayo : No daughter of o moves . Stayt : No daughter of moves . To see how these constraints prohibit phonological movement , take a phrase like 30a above , repeated in 102 with the prosodic ...
( 101 ) STAYw : No daughter of w moves . Stayo : No daughter of o moves . Stayt : No daughter of moves . To see how these constraints prohibit phonological movement , take a phrase like 30a above , repeated in 102 with the prosodic ...
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Inhalt
Phonological movement in Classical Greek Brian Agbayani Chris Golston | 133 |
Processing dative constructions in American | 168 |
Reviews see back cover | 214 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent addressee agreement alternative analysis appear approach argue argument associative auxiliary Cambridge chapter claim clause cognitive Colloquial French complement complex constraints constructions context contrast corpus dative definite dependencies derived discussion distinction doubling effect elements English evidence example expected experiment explain F-marking fact focus French fronted function further given grammar head indicate interpretation inversion involve island John language lexical linguistic locative marking meaning morphology movement moves nature noted noun object observed Oxford particular patterns person phonological phrase plural position possible predicted present processing prominence pronouns properties proposed prosodic question reading reference relative requires rules semantic sentence speakers specific speech structure subject clitics suggest syntactic syntax theme theory tion University University Press verb