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42 ( which is parallel with 36 ) , shows that an interpretation is possible by which the argument Pro is controlled by John , Bill , Fred , and Peter together , or any combination of these persons : ( 42 ) John told Bill that Fred said ...
42 ( which is parallel with 36 ) , shows that an interpretation is possible by which the argument Pro is controlled by John , Bill , Fred , and Peter together , or any combination of these persons : ( 42 ) John told Bill that Fred said ...
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While the phonological feature allows certain rule equivalences across languages to be expressed , the phonetic categories describe possible contrasts within languages , and express markedness relations . * 1. INTRODUCTION .
While the phonological feature allows certain rule equivalences across languages to be expressed , the phonetic categories describe possible contrasts within languages , and express markedness relations . * 1. INTRODUCTION .
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But how can such motivation be possible ? Linguists generally acknowledge psychologically real constraints on sequences and segments in a language , as shown by English speakers ' rejection of nonsense forms like * tsim and * söm as ...
But how can such motivation be possible ? Linguists generally acknowledge psychologically real constraints on sequences and segments in a language , as shown by English speakers ' rejection of nonsense forms like * tsim and * söm as ...
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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 | |
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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 observed occur particular pattern phonetic phonological phrase position possible predictions present Press principle problem production properties proposed provides question reference relation relative represented result rules 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