Language, Band 58George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1982 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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... give someone a kiss will never be generated, or expressions like *give someone a kill will never be blocked. There is a difference in meaning between kissing someone and giving someone a kiss, between walking and having a walk. The task ...
... give someone a kiss will never be generated, or expressions like *give someone a kill will never be blocked. There is a difference in meaning between kissing someone and giving someone a kiss, between walking and having a walk. The task ...
Seite 753
... give the window an open ? to give someone a kiss but not * a kill ? to have a drink but not an eat ? to have a walk but not * a speak ? Facts of this kind are often dismissed as idiosyncratic , and thus not subjected to serious study ...
... give the window an open ? to give someone a kiss but not * a kill ? to have a drink but not an eat ? to have a walk but not * a speak ? Facts of this kind are often dismissed as idiosyncratic , and thus not subjected to serious study ...
Seite 754
... give someone a kiss will never be generated , or expressions like * give someone a kill will never be blocked . There is a difference in meaning between kissing someone and giving someone a kiss , between walking and having a walk . The ...
... give someone a kiss will never be generated , or expressions like * give someone a kill will never be blocked . There is a difference in meaning between kissing someone and giving someone a kiss , between walking and having a walk . The ...
Inhalt
Oral and literate strategies in spoken and written narratives Deborah Tannen | 1 |
Space grammar analysability and the English passive Ronald W Langacker | 22 |
Syntactic relations in Western Muskogean P Munro and L Gordon | 81 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action active acts adverbs agent analysis appear apply approach argument assume base basic Chap claim clause complements component concerned considered constituent construction contains context contrast deletion derived described direct discourse discussion distinction English evidence examples expressions fact final function further give given grammar Guaraní important indicate initial interesting interpretation involved John language lexical linguistic look marked meaning natural noted notion object occur operators particular passive past person phonological position possible pragmatic predicate present Press problem proposed question reference relation relative represent request require result rule semantic sense sentence shwa speakers specific speech structure suggest syllable syntactic syntax theory topic transitive treated units University utterance verbs volume vowel written York