Language, Band 72,Ausgaben 1-2Linguistic Society of America, 1996 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 86
Seite 74
... given by the ratio in 3 . ( 3 ) PNC = VN ( 1 , c ) Ne In contrast to P * , the productivity statistic P does not take into account the rate at which tokens with affix c appear in the overall sample . What P represents is the likelihood ...
... given by the ratio in 3 . ( 3 ) PNC = VN ( 1 , c ) Ne In contrast to P * , the productivity statistic P does not take into account the rate at which tokens with affix c appear in the overall sample . What P represents is the likelihood ...
Seite 154
... given condition will hold in any language . A & P argue for physiological antagonism or synergism between certain feature combinations - for instance , advancing the tongue root causes the tongue body to raise ( and vice versa ) ...
... given condition will hold in any language . A & P argue for physiological antagonism or synergism between certain feature combinations - for instance , advancing the tongue root causes the tongue body to raise ( and vice versa ) ...
Seite 214
... given in the text should take such forms as ' Examples are given in Nichols 1986 ' , ' Bloomfield ( 1933 : 264 ) introduced the term ... ' , or ' Many coastal languages of the Northwest had sounds intermediate between nasal and voiced ...
... given in the text should take such forms as ' Examples are given in Nichols 1986 ' , ' Bloomfield ( 1933 : 264 ) introduced the term ... ' , or ' Many coastal languages of the Northwest had sounds intermediate between nasal and voiced ...
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