Language, Band 61,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1985 |
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... WORDS . I now turn to a series of pretheo- retical and theoretical observations about affixes , clitics , words , and phrases- leading to tests that might , in favorable circumstances , distinguish clitics from words . The tests all ...
... WORDS . I now turn to a series of pretheo- retical and theoretical observations about affixes , clitics , words , and phrases- leading to tests that might , in favorable circumstances , distinguish clitics from words . The tests all ...
Seite 405
... words , but were used with no recognizable context - were placed in the word category , though they may have been bab- bled sequences which happened to resemble one of the child's words . Most of the children produced a variety of ...
... words , but were used with no recognizable context - were placed in the word category , though they may have been bab- bled sequences which happened to resemble one of the child's words . Most of the children produced a variety of ...
Seite 434
... words and stops in words ) results largely from a single factor , such as a tendency for the early lexicon of English - speaking children to be composed of words with stop consonants . Given the large number of categories within the ...
... words and stops in words ) results largely from a single factor , such as a tendency for the early lexicon of English - speaking children to be composed of words with stop consonants . Given the large number of categories within the ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent affixes analysis appear approach argument aspect Chap Chinese claim clause clitics communication complement consider constituent constructions contains context contrast definite dialect direct discourse discussion distinction element English evidence examples expressed fact FIGURE final function give given grammar important indicate interesting interpretation involve John language lexical linguistic logical major marked meaning metalinguistic natural negation negative Note nouns object occur operator particles particular passive patterns person phonological phrase position possible pragmatic present Press principles problem question reading reference relation relative rules semantic sentences similar speakers speech stress structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table theory topic true types University utterance varieties verb words written York