Language, Band 68,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1992 |
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Seite 45
... assume first that phrases are built around an element which is their head , and that such phrases come in two levels ... assumed to be maximal projections . These assumptions are summa- rized in the rules in 1 ( cf. Chomsky 1986 : 3 ) ...
... assume first that phrases are built around an element which is their head , and that such phrases come in two levels ... assumed to be maximal projections . These assumptions are summa- rized in the rules in 1 ( cf. Chomsky 1986 : 3 ) ...
Seite 64
... assume these are VP complements . In contrast to 47 , an cannot separate an aspectless complement from its governing ... Assume that an attaches to the right edge of an IntP which contains a first - person element , as in 50 , and assume ...
... assume these are VP complements . In contrast to 47 , an cannot separate an aspectless complement from its governing ... Assume that an attaches to the right edge of an IntP which contains a first - person element , as in 50 , and assume ...
Seite 298
... assume that in Polish the skeleton is not a primitive , but is derived from the phonemic tier . This means that the ... assumed that an unsyllabified unit cannot be found inside a syllable , in accordance with the claim that only ...
... assume that in Polish the skeleton is not a primitive , but is derived from the phonemic tier . This means that the ... assumed that an unsyllabified unit cannot be found inside a syllable , in accordance with the claim that only ...
Inhalt
Abschnitt 1 | 1 |
Abschnitt 2 | 43 |
Abschnitt 3 | 81 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acquisition alternative American analysis appear approach areas argues argument assume assumption called Cambridge chapter claim clause Cloth comparative complement consider consistent consonant consonantal constituent constructions contains context correlation dependents discussion effects elements English evidence examples fact final focus function give given grammar groups head important involve issues Japanese John language learning lexical linguistic major meaning Native nature noted noun object occur original pairs particles patterners phonology phrase position possible precede predicts present Press Principle problem pronoun proposed question reference relation relative representation represented requires respect role root rules segments semantic sentences shows speakers specific speech structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table theoretical theory topic traditional University verb vowels yers