Language, Band 46,Ausgabe 2,Teile 2-4Linguistic Society of America, 1970 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 83
Seite 679
... Given the distribution of [ h ] and [ p ] in English , it should make no difference in a purely abstract system whether they have a given non - abstract feature in common or not . That [ h ] and [ n ] have no real feature in common is ...
... Given the distribution of [ h ] and [ p ] in English , it should make no difference in a purely abstract system whether they have a given non - abstract feature in common or not . That [ h ] and [ n ] have no real feature in common is ...
Seite 785
... given language . Nevertheless , in many languages some of these outer - peripheral elements permute to a grammatical juncture almost anywhere within the interior of the sentence . This is , in fact , one feature which frequently ...
... given language . Nevertheless , in many languages some of these outer - peripheral elements permute to a grammatical juncture almost anywhere within the interior of the sentence . This is , in fact , one feature which frequently ...
Seite 937
... given only meager evidence of how generalizations were made , and what we do learn of such procedures should make us uneasy . Of possible use to developmental psycholinguists are the many ex- amples given of children's spontaneous ...
... given only meager evidence of how generalizations were made , and what we do learn of such procedures should make us uneasy . Of possible use to developmental psycholinguists are the many ex- amples given of children's spontaneous ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent adjectives alternation analysis appear applies base Bill chapter Chomsky classes clause clear comparative complex conjunction considered consonant constraint constructions contains coördinate deep definite deletion derived dialects discussion distinctive distribution element English example existence fact Figure final function further give given grammar historical Hypothesis indicate instance interesting interpretation involved John language latter lexical linguistic marked meaning mentioned morphemes nature negative Note noun occur origin pairs particular passive phonemic phonological phrase position possible predicate present problem quantifiers question reading reason reference representations represented respectively result rules seems semantic sentence signs social speakers speech standard stress structure suggested surface syllable syntactic Table tense theory tion transformational underlying University variables verb Voegelin vowel