Language, Band 73,Ausgaben 3-4Linguistic Society of America, 1997 |
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... pronouns can readily occur with a demonstrative pronoun , as we saw in §3.2 . If English personal pronouns are generally N - pronouns , the ungram- matical status of the examples in 36 would remain mysterious . Second , there is a ...
... pronouns can readily occur with a demonstrative pronoun , as we saw in §3.2 . If English personal pronouns are generally N - pronouns , the ungram- matical status of the examples in 36 would remain mysterious . Second , there is a ...
Seite 782
... PRONOUNS . At this point , it might be appropriate to compare the traditional view of Japanese personal pronouns with mine . The traditional view , advocated by researchers such as Mikami ( 1953 ) and Kuroda ( 1965 ) , is that what I ...
... PRONOUNS . At this point , it might be appropriate to compare the traditional view of Japanese personal pronouns with mine . The traditional view , advocated by researchers such as Mikami ( 1953 ) and Kuroda ( 1965 ) , is that what I ...
Seite 783
... pronouns are not pronouns . It simply indicates that the use of words such as kare is not equivalent to that of English personal pronouns . The fundamental problem with the traditional view is that it is based on the implicit assumption ...
... pronouns are not pronouns . It simply indicates that the use of words such as kare is not equivalent to that of English personal pronouns . The fundamental problem with the traditional view is that it is based on the implicit assumption ...
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active American analysis appear approach argues argument aspects authors Cambridge chapter clauses cognitive communication complex condition consider constraints construction contains context contrast culture described detailed direct discourse discussion distinct effects elision English example expression fact female formal function further given gives grammar head hierarchy historical important interesting interpretation introduction involve issues Japanese John language lexical linguistic male meaning morphology names nature notes noun object obviation occur original particular passive patterns person phonetic phonology phrase position possible present Press principles problem processes pronouns proposed provides question ranking reader reading reference result role rules semantic sentences shows speakers speech structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax textbook theory third tion tone types Tzotzil University verb violates volume vowel York