Language, Band 56George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1980 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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... examples may fail because the coreferential interpretations are not natural . This , however , would show more about C's and Lasnik's rules than about the examples . It would show that the rules are not rules of grammar , but ...
... examples may fail because the coreferential interpretations are not natural . This , however , would show more about C's and Lasnik's rules than about the examples . It would show that the rules are not rules of grammar , but ...
Seite 571
... examples in 5 are all matrix exclamations which Grimshaw 1977 argues are non - sentential . Given her analysis , an exclamation like How easy to tease John is ! will have the approximate structure of Figure 3. Note that the head of this ...
... examples in 5 are all matrix exclamations which Grimshaw 1977 argues are non - sentential . Given her analysis , an exclamation like How easy to tease John is ! will have the approximate structure of Figure 3. Note that the head of this ...
Seite 589
... examples , e.g. 12f , there is no ' old information ' at all ; shelves have not been mentioned before in this description of an auction room . All these inversions begin with ' new information ' - relational predicates like attached and ...
... examples , e.g. 12f , there is no ' old information ' at all ; shelves have not been mentioned before in this description of an auction room . All these inversions begin with ' new information ' - relational predicates like attached and ...
Inhalt
Chomsky on meaning Jerrold J Katz | 1 |
Peculiar passives Alice Davison | 42 |
Russian conjugation Michael Shapiro | 67 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action adjective alternations analysis appear apply arguments aspect claim clause complement complex considered consonant constructions context countability deletion derived described determined dialects direct discussion distinction effect English environments evidence examples explain expressed fact final forms French function German given grammar historical important indicate inflections interesting interpretation John language lexical linguistic logical marked meaning morphological names natural nominative noted notion nouns NP's object occur particular passive person phonetic phonological phrase plural position possible predict present Press principle problem pronoun properties proposed question Raising reference relations relative represented rule seems semantic sense sentences speakers specific speech stage stem structure suffix suggests surface syntactic syntax theory tion transformational Transitivity University verb vowel York