Language, Band 26George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1950 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 62
Seite 238
... expression of the imperfective type by anteposition seems a fairly fixed system ; the expression of the perfective type allows free variation , but has a marked preference for postposition . In the follow- ing examples , contrast of ...
... expression of the imperfective type by anteposition seems a fairly fixed system ; the expression of the perfective type allows free variation , but has a marked preference for postposition . In the follow- ing examples , contrast of ...
Seite 251
... expression . An interesting point of classification is involved here . The close and invariable unity between action and predicative might be taken as a reason to discuss the predicatives under what we call binary expressions ( §2.1 ) ...
... expression . An interesting point of classification is involved here . The close and invariable unity between action and predicative might be taken as a reason to discuss the predicatives under what we call binary expressions ( §2.1 ) ...
Seite 262
... expression has some in- fluence on the position of the actor . ( 1 ) In a binary expression ( an expression consisting of action and actor only ) the position of the actor is free . If there is fixed order it depends on features other ...
... expression has some in- fluence on the position of the actor . ( 1 ) In a binary expression ( an expression consisting of action and actor only ) the position of the actor is free . If there is fixed order it depends on features other ...
Inhalt
The Pronunciation of Written ai and au | 1 |
The Comparison of Inequality in Spanish | 28 |
Peiping Morphophonemics | 63 |
21 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actor follows actor precedes adjective adverb allophones alternants American analysis Associate Professor BERNARD BLOCH borrowing Chinese College comparative consonant construction contrast dialect discussion element Esperanto etymology evidence examples expression formant forms free variation French fué function word grammar Gullah Hall Hans Kurath Hittite indefinite singular indicated Indo-European initial inscriptions Japanese Juan Latin Library linguistic Linguistic Society loanwords meaning microsegment Minoan morphemes morphotonemic morphs names nasalized native noun object occur ONFr OSFr parallel particle pattern PGRom Ph.D phonemes phonology phrase plural position predicative present base problem Professor of English pronoun quedar Ramón reconstruction reduplication Romance Languages Sanskrit semantic semivowel sound Spanish speaker speech stem tone stress structure substitution suffix syllable texts tion Tocharian University of Michigan verb stem voiceless vowel Vulgar Latin Yale York ἔνθα