Language, Band 48George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1972 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
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Seite 295
... surface structure to give the correct stress in most cases . I would like to suggest that 39-44 should be handled by the old NSR applying to surface structure , like other phonological rules . To handle the relatively small percentage ...
... surface structure to give the correct stress in most cases . I would like to suggest that 39-44 should be handled by the old NSR applying to surface structure , like other phonological rules . To handle the relatively small percentage ...
Seite 331
... surface structure . Of the four cases they present , only one is truly a surface - structure generalization . This is their ob- servation that ' regardless of the " derivational history " of a sentence , if it ends in an NP , this NP ...
... surface structure . Of the four cases they present , only one is truly a surface - structure generalization . This is their ob- servation that ' regardless of the " derivational history " of a sentence , if it ends in an NP , this NP ...
Seite 655
... surface subject position , changes the verb into an oblique , passive- like form , and marks the Instrumental with a preposition : ( 12 ) The child was interested in amazed at the performance . In and at in 12 are regarded as marked ...
... surface subject position , changes the verb into an oblique , passive- like form , and marks the Instrumental with a preposition : ( 12 ) The child was interested in amazed at the performance . In and at in 12 are regarded as marked ...
Inhalt
Hayward Keniston 18831970 obituary by Robert A Hall Jr | 249 |
presentday English Bolinger 454 | 256 |
Semantic axiom number one | 257 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent alternative analysis appears apply argument assignment assume becomes boundaries called Chinook claim clause clear comparative considered consonant constituent constructions contains course cyclic deletion derivation dialects diphthongization discussion distinction elements English evidence examples existence explain fact Figure final function further give given global grammar hypothesis implies important indicate interesting interpretation involved Jargon John kind language latter least lexical linguistic marked markedness meaning nature normal noted noun object observed occur original phonetic phonological phrase position possible preceding predicate present Press primary principle problem pronominal proposal question reason reference relations relative respect result rule seems segments semantic sentences speakers specific speech stem stress structure suggests surface syllable syntactic theory tion transformational underlying University verb vowel