Language, Band 68,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1992 |
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... present an outline of the paper . In §§2-4 I present data on various pairs of elements , demonstrating which of them correlate in order with the verb and object and which do not . Much of §§3-4 is also devoted to arguing that the ...
... present an outline of the paper . In §§2-4 I present data on various pairs of elements , demonstrating which of them correlate in order with the verb and object and which do not . Much of §§3-4 is also devoted to arguing that the ...
Seite 256
... present ] 2 . b . Anne gave [ a present ] o [ to Bill ] pp . ( 14 ) a . * Anne gave [ a present ] 2 [ the person she liked most of all ] ,. b . Anne gave [ to Bill ] PP [ a present she had bought him ] o . ( 15 ) a . [ Bill ] , was ...
... present ] 2 . b . Anne gave [ a present ] o [ to Bill ] pp . ( 14 ) a . * Anne gave [ a present ] 2 [ the person she liked most of all ] ,. b . Anne gave [ to Bill ] PP [ a present she had bought him ] o . ( 15 ) a . [ Bill ] , was ...
Seite 425
... present research from con- versation analysis of turn - taking . In the most carefully argued paper in the volume , Schegloff maintains that coherence in conversation can best be defined in terms of minimally and max- imally expanded ...
... present research from con- versation analysis of turn - taking . In the most carefully argued paper in the volume , Schegloff maintains that coherence in conversation can best be defined in terms of minimally and max- imally expanded ...
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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