Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 47
Seite 69
An investigation of the morphological structure of the neologisms provides strong support for Aronoff's ( 1976 ) claim that the productivity of an affix may vary significantly with the morphological structure of the base word to which ...
An investigation of the morphological structure of the neologisms provides strong support for Aronoff's ( 1976 ) claim that the productivity of an affix may vary significantly with the morphological structure of the base word to which ...
Seite 81
The positive slopes for the regression lines obtained for the productive affixes suggest that these affixes may be be- coming increasingly productive in the Times . This would imply that the urn model for word frequency distributions ...
The positive slopes for the regression lines obtained for the productive affixes suggest that these affixes may be be- coming increasingly productive in the Times . This would imply that the urn model for word frequency distributions ...
Seite 87
Within the input domain de- fined by these restrictions , an affix is claimed to be absolutely productive . Any numerical differences within this input domain , such as widely varying numbers of types and neologisms as a function of the ...
Within the input domain de- fined by these restrictions , an affix is claimed to be absolutely productive . Any numerical differences within this input domain , such as widely varying numbers of types and neologisms as a function of the ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Inhalt
Graham Thurgood | 31 |
Productive lexical innovations | 69 |
Evidence for | 97 |
Urheberrecht | |
5 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acceptability acquisition activity affixes allow analysis appear approach argues argument aspect authors Cambridge Cham chapter claim comparative constraints construction contain context defined deverbal direct discourse discussion distinction distribution English estimation evidence example expression fact final formal function German given grammar historical important independent initial instance interest internal interpretation issues judgments language lexical linguistic marked meaning meter metrical modal nature nominal object occur particular pattern person phonological position possible predicate present Press principles problems productivity prominence pronouns properties provides questions range reference represented requires role rules sample scale semantic sentence shows speakers stress strong structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table theory tion tone topic unaccusative University verb volume vowel weak words World