Language, Band 60George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1984 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 69
Seite 276
... evidence from Greenberg mentioned in Table 5 does not directly provide cross - linguistic evidence for FUSE . This is so partly because Greenberg was interested in any kind of correlation , rather than investigating a specific ...
... evidence from Greenberg mentioned in Table 5 does not directly provide cross - linguistic evidence for FUSE . This is so partly because Greenberg was interested in any kind of correlation , rather than investigating a specific ...
Seite 279
... evidence concerning various other correlations in Table 2. There is , furthermore , some evidence that languages often drift toward one of these types ( cf. Givón 1979 : 275 ) . However , Vennemann's views can be criticized for a number ...
... evidence concerning various other correlations in Table 2. There is , furthermore , some evidence that languages often drift toward one of these types ( cf. Givón 1979 : 275 ) . However , Vennemann's views can be criticized for a number ...
Seite 896
... evidence , she argues that English sentential stress is indeed supreseg- mental ; and Becker 1979 argues specifically for an autosegmental represen- tation of stress . Such behavioral evidence reinforces the conclusion , reached on the ...
... evidence , she argues that English sentential stress is indeed supreseg- mental ; and Becker 1979 argues specifically for an autosegmental represen- tation of stress . Such behavioral evidence reinforces the conclusion , reached on the ...
Inhalt
Linguistic phonetic descriptions of clicks P Ladefoged and A Traill | 1 |
Segmental rules of English and cyclic phonology Jerzy Rubach | 21 |
Surface wordorder typology and Universal Grammar Peter Coopmans | 55 |
Urheberrecht | |
25 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquisition agent alternative analysis appear apply argument claim clause consider consists constructions contains contrast derived dialects discourse discussion distinction English evidence example exists expressed fact FIGURE final formal function further German given gives grammar historical important indicate interesting interpretation involved John language learning less lexical linguistic meaning nature nominal notes nouns object occur particular pattern phonetic phonological phrase position possible predictions present Press principle problem production properties proposed provides question reference relation relative represented result rules seems segment semantic sentences sound Spanish speakers specific speech stem stops structure suffix suggests syntactic syntax Table tense thematic theory University values verb voice volume vowel word order