Language, Band 47,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1971 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 75
Seite 522
... meaning of that word from all the meanings that float around it . But to have assigned ' desire ' to want at an earlier stage would have been to overload its meaning , to confuse inference with reference , no matter what the intent of ...
... meaning of that word from all the meanings that float around it . But to have assigned ' desire ' to want at an earlier stage would have been to overload its meaning , to confuse inference with reference , no matter what the intent of ...
Seite 547
... meaning , in excessive synchrony . The bond between form and meaning is the one that changes fastest , often with fantastic leaps ; to understand a meaning now , it is necessary to know what it was yesterday . A look at the ...
... meaning , in excessive synchrony . The bond between form and meaning is the one that changes fastest , often with fantastic leaps ; to understand a meaning now , it is necessary to know what it was yesterday . A look at the ...
Seite 912
... meaning ' ( 40 ) . At least four articles in the Anthology are concerned with the problem of meaning : ' Linguistic aspects of science ' ( 1935 ) , ' Language or ideas ' ( 1936 ) , ' Philosophical aspects of language ' ( 1942 ) , and ' ...
... meaning ' ( 40 ) . At least four articles in the Anthology are concerned with the problem of meaning : ' Linguistic aspects of science ' ( 1935 ) , ' Language or ideas ' ( 1936 ) , ' Philosophical aspects of language ' ( 1942 ) , and ' ...
Inhalt
The phoneme revisited | 503 |
Semantic overloading a restudy of the verb remind | 522 |
Controlled activation of latent contrast | 548 |
Urheberrecht | |
15 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
alternations analysis appear applied become century child Chomsky clause complete concerned considered consonants contains contrast course definition derived described dialects diminutive discussion distinctive English evidence example exist expression fact Figure final forms function German given grammar Halle important indicate interest involved John kind language later lexical linguistic marked meaning morpheme morphophonemic nasal nature noun object occur operation opposition original palatalized pattern phonemic phonological phrase position possible preceding present Press problem question realization reference relation relative remind representation root rules seems segments semantic sentence sequence shifts significant similar sound speakers speech stops stress structure suggest surface syllable symbol theory tion transformational underlying University verb voiced vowels