Language, Band 40George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1964 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 92
Seite 401
... possible sentence forms from eight to infinity , since it permits conjunction of every class except the nouns ( none of the application rules A1 - A4 introduce nouns ) . The second extension permits morphologically complex words to fill ...
... possible sentence forms from eight to infinity , since it permits conjunction of every class except the nouns ( none of the application rules A1 - A4 introduce nouns ) . The second extension permits morphologically complex words to fill ...
Seite 404
... possible transforms of a given operand ; although it looks fairly compli- cated , it is conceptually of no more depth than would be an algorithm for com- puting all the possible paths by which a king could move from one square of a ...
... possible transforms of a given operand ; although it looks fairly compli- cated , it is conceptually of no more depth than would be an algorithm for com- puting all the possible paths by which a king could move from one square of a ...
Seite 405
... possible transformations of all possible languages . Hence Šaumjan is at best meeting one of Chomsky's fundamental requirements for linguistic theory , not proposing a new theory of greater generality . If Šaumjan's writing backed up ...
... possible transformations of all possible languages . Hence Šaumjan is at best meeting one of Chomsky's fundamental requirements for linguistic theory , not proposing a new theory of greater generality . If Šaumjan's writing backed up ...
Inhalt
Notes | 508 |
CONTENTS | |
Relatedness between grammatical systems | |
Urheberrecht | |
6 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
American analysis Angeles appear Assistant Professor Associate Professor Calif called Cambridge Center Chicago City College comparative concerned considered consonant contains corresponding Department dialects discussion elements ending evidence example expression fact final Foreign forms German given grammar Greek Hall important included indicate Institute Instructor interest interpretation JAMES Japan JOHN language Library Linguistics Mass meaning Member Michigan names noun object occur Ohio original Ph.D phonemic position possible present problem Professor of English publication question reference relation Research ROBERT rules School semantic sentence signs Society speakers speech strings structure Teacher Texas texts theory tion Tokyo transformations units University University of California verb versity vowel Washington writing York