But, Only, Just: Focusing Adverbial Change in Modern English 1500-1900, Band 51Société néophilologique, 1991 - 313 Seiten |
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Seite 54
... semantic type of the focusing adverbial . It is the semantic types that we shall turn to first . In his study of definiteness , Hawkins ( 1978 : 230 ) remarks that a sentence with the adverbial quantifier ONLY is semantically much more ...
... semantic type of the focusing adverbial . It is the semantic types that we shall turn to first . In his study of definiteness , Hawkins ( 1978 : 230 ) remarks that a sentence with the adverbial quantifier ONLY is semantically much more ...
Seite 69
... semantic accounts of ONLY associate it with negative rather than positive polarity . I will also continue to discuss the semantics of exclusive focusing adverbials within the implicational framework that was introduced in section 2.3.1 ...
... semantic accounts of ONLY associate it with negative rather than positive polarity . I will also continue to discuss the semantics of exclusive focusing adverbials within the implicational framework that was introduced in section 2.3.1 ...
Seite 84
... semantic focus . He is prepared to relax his syntactic focus principle in the case of ' limiting ONLY ' , i.e. ONLY with a scalar focus , and assign it the ' widest possible focus within the limits imposed by the scalarity requirement ...
... semantic focus . He is prepared to relax his syntactic focus principle in the case of ' limiting ONLY ' , i.e. ONLY with a scalar focus , and assign it the ' widest possible focus within the limits imposed by the scalarity requirement ...
Inhalt
X | 18 |
LINGUISTIC PROPERTIES OF THE FOCUSING | 31 |
RECONSTRUCTING THE DIACHRONIC | 89 |
Urheberrecht | |
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affect analysis appear aspects associated assume Cambridge century Chapter clause comedies considered constituent contexts corpus definite dependency determiner diachronic discussed distributions Early educational element EModE English evidence example exclusive exclusive adverbial expected expressions fact factors favour focus focusing adverbials frequency function further genres given Grammar grammaticalization Historical illustrated instance interpretation John Language less letters lexical linguistic LModE London marked Mary meaning MERELY ModE modifier narrow negative Nevalainen notion object occur oral Oxford paradigm parliamentary Period phrase position possible predicate preferences present Press prototype purely quantified quantitative Quirk reading recorded relative remain respect restricted rule scalar scope selection semantic sense sentence sermons SIMPLY SOLELY sources speech structure suggests syntactic Table tion typical University Press usually variable variation verb written York