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Seite 297
Early descriptions of informativity treat it as a binary category : GIVEN ( old , known , predictable , evoked ) information vs. NEW ( unknown , unpredictable ) information . These binary categories can be translated into numerical ...
Early descriptions of informativity treat it as a binary category : GIVEN ( old , known , predictable , evoked ) information vs. NEW ( unknown , unpredictable ) information . These binary categories can be translated into numerical ...
Seite 385
7 Experience shows that it is easy to construct a comparative dataset using only qualitative characters that evolve without backmutation — that is , characters that never change from a given state to a second state ( and potentially to ...
7 Experience shows that it is easy to construct a comparative dataset using only qualitative characters that evolve without backmutation — that is , characters that never change from a given state to a second state ( and potentially to ...
Seite 487
With regard to the Hyatt interviews , K acknowledges Bailey's ( 2001 ) rating of the transcripts as only ' fair ' in terms of their representativeness , given the fact that they were restricted to hoodoo people only .
With regard to the Hyatt interviews , K acknowledges Bailey's ( 2001 ) rating of the transcripts as only ' fair ' in terms of their representativeness , given the fact that they were restricted to hoodoo people only .
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Inhalt
Letters to Language | 5 |
Iterative footing and prominencedriven | 47 |
Noun incorporation in Mapudungun | 138 |
Urheberrecht | |
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adjectives agreement American analysis appear approach argues argument aspects Cambridge characters claim clause comparative complement complex compounds consider constraints constructions contains context contrast derived determined direct discourse discussion distinction effects English event evidence example expressed fact Figure foot forms function given grammar groups incorporation indicate interesting interpretation issues John learning lexical linguistic marked meaning modifiers morphology nature noted noun object occur patterns performance person phonological phrase position possible predict present problem processes production properties question reason reference relation relative represent respect result role scale semantic sentences sign languages similar Spanish speakers specific speech standard stress structure suggests syllables syntactic syntax theory tion tree trochaic turn University University Press variants verb vowel