Language, Band 73,Ausgaben 3-4Linguistic Society of America, 1997 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 86
Seite 557
... rules must be listed in long - term memory , but those of productive lexical rules do not : they can be composed on line in the course of sentence perception and production . That is , in terms of their role in the grammar , the ...
... rules must be listed in long - term memory , but those of productive lexical rules do not : they can be composed on line in the course of sentence perception and production . That is , in terms of their role in the grammar , the ...
Seite 589
... rule such that the probabilities of the rules expanding a given nonterminal symbol sum up to unity . Ch . 6 develops the mathematics for probabilistic context - free grammars . As in the case of HMMs , two basic kinds of algorithms are ...
... rule such that the probabilities of the rules expanding a given nonterminal symbol sum up to unity . Ch . 6 develops the mathematics for probabilistic context - free grammars . As in the case of HMMs , two basic kinds of algorithms are ...
Seite 868
... rules were restructured to restrict compounds with parasiting to a small number of verse types . It is in this interval , then , between the development of the svarabhakti vowels and this restructuring of the metrical rules that those ...
... rules were restructured to restrict compounds with parasiting to a small number of verse types . It is in this interval , then , between the development of the svarabhakti vowels and this restructuring of the metrical rules that those ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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