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We call complements that express actions ACTIONAL complements and those that express situations ( which include actions ) ... By contrast , talk to NP about NP allows its complement to be any state or event ( 25a ) , and control is nearly ...
We call complements that express actions ACTIONAL complements and those that express situations ( which include actions ) ... By contrast , talk to NP about NP allows its complement to be any state or event ( 25a ) , and control is nearly ...
Seite 526
And some verbs , for instance tell and persuade , select situational that complements and actional infinitival ... but requires an actional complement ( 30a ) , and lucky and unlucky allow a situational complement but require an InfP ...
And some verbs , for instance tell and persuade , select situational that complements and actional infinitival ... but requires an actional complement ( 30a ) , and lucky and unlucky allow a situational complement but require an InfP ...
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One reading of contract with parallels hire : the object gets paid by the subject and controls the complement ( 48a ) . The other parallels hire oneself out : the subject gets paid by the object and controls the complement ( 48b ) .
One reading of contract with parallels hire : the object gets paid by the subject and controls the complement ( 48a ) . The other parallels hire oneself out : the subject gets paid by the object and controls the complement ( 48b ) .
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Inhalt
Charles F Hockett James W Gair | 600 |
McCawley John Lawler | 614 |
Book Notices see back cover | 643 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acquisition action adpositions ambiguity analysis appear approach argues argument basic Cambridge chapter clauses cognitive communication comparative complement complex concepts considered constructions contains context contrast derivational discourse discussion distinction documentation English evidence example expressions fact factors format functional German given grammar Hockett important inflectional interaction interesting interpretation introduction involves issues John language lexical linguistic meaning morphology nature nominal notes noun object Oxford particular past patterns person perspective phrase position possible practice predicates present principles problem processing pronouns properties proposed provides published question reason reference relations relative represent resource role rules semantic sentences speakers speech stem structure suggests syntactic syntax Table theoretical theory tion topics types University Press verbs volume