Language, Band 86,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 2010 |
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Seite 157
... words to lexical heads is a little looser : the right edge of every prosodic word has to align with a lexical head ( as it does above ) , but the left edge need not , with the result that functional heads are tucked into prosodic words ...
... words to lexical heads is a little looser : the right edge of every prosodic word has to align with a lexical head ( as it does above ) , but the left edge need not , with the result that functional heads are tucked into prosodic words ...
Seite 312
... words , and caesuras are allowed at phonological word boundaries.18 When the phonological and morphological structures do not match , it can happen that the caesura is placed in the middle of a morphological word - in fact , in the ...
... words , and caesuras are allowed at phonological word boundaries.18 When the phonological and morphological structures do not match , it can happen that the caesura is placed in the middle of a morphological word - in fact , in the ...
Seite 315
... word ; hence ( by strict layering ) the second member of the compound stem is a phonological word also . All but the first accent is erased within each phonological word . This is referred to in the literature as the BASIC ACCEN ...
... word ; hence ( by strict layering ) the second member of the compound stem is a phonological word also . All but the first accent is erased within each phonological word . This is referred to in the literature as the BASIC ACCEN ...
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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addressee affixes agreement alternative Amsterdam analysis anaphor animacy argue argument associative auxiliary Bresnan Cambridge Chomsky clause CM&P cognitive Colloquial French complement complex compound constraints constructions context contrast dative dative constructions definite derived dialects discourse discussion do-support DP subjects dvandvas effect ellipsis English evidence example extraction F-marking first-person focus French subject clitics grammar grammaticalization guage head HPSG hyperbaton Infl inflectional information structure interaction interpretation island John Benjamins language lexeme lexical linguistic locative inversion markedness markers metrical structure morphological morphology movement noun nuclear accent Oxford pattern phonetic phonological phonological word phrase pitch accents plural position postpositive predicted prepositional present processing prominence pronouns properties proposed prosodic reading reference rheme second-person pronouns self-ascription semantic sentence speakers specific speech subject clitics subject doubling subject-auxiliary inversion syntactic syntax theme theme/rheme theory tion typology University Press Vedic verb word