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Seite 595
As demonstrated in Table 2 below , Leo continued to produce more , and a greater variety of , CTVs throughout development . The fact that more and more verbs appeared in the slot of the CTV suggests that the complement - clause ...
As demonstrated in Table 2 below , Leo continued to produce more , and a greater variety of , CTVs throughout development . The fact that more and more verbs appeared in the slot of the CTV suggests that the complement - clause ...
Seite 636
2 4 2 6 14 ( 2.31 % ) Type ( i ) in Table 3 corresponds to examples labeled entailed resultative and continuative perfect readings in Table 2. Implicated resultative or nonresultative perfect readings in Table 2 are either of type ( iia ...
2 4 2 6 14 ( 2.31 % ) Type ( i ) in Table 3 corresponds to examples labeled entailed resultative and continuative perfect readings in Table 2. Implicated resultative or nonresultative perfect readings in Table 2 are either of type ( iia ...
Seite 773
Percentages from the actual corpus ( Table 2 ) are repeated here to the left of each slash ; percentages generated by the learner are to the right . For each res position seen by the learner , the number of tokens seen is given in ...
Percentages from the actual corpus ( Table 2 ) are repeated here to the left of each slash ; percentages generated by the learner are to the right . For each res position seen by the learner , the number of tokens seen is given in ...
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Inhalt
LANGUAGE | 483 |
What is a perfect state? Atsuko Nishiyama JeanPierre Koenig | 611 |
A reply to Haspelmath Frederick J Newmeyer | 688 |
Urheberrecht | |
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alternations analysis apply approach argue argument Cambridge cause chapter clauses comparative comparative concepts complement clauses complex constraints constructions context contrast defined definition descriptive discourse discussion distinct effect English entailments event evidence example express fact FIGURE function give given grammar head iconic interesting interpretation introduction involve issues John Journal language learning lexical linguistic Linguistic Typology look mapping marked meaning metaphorical morphology nature noted noun object Oxford particular patterns perfect person phonology phrase position possible predicate present processing properties proposed question reading reduplication reference relative relevant represent require role rules semantic sentence sign languages similar speakers specific structure suggests syntactic syntax Table theory tion topic University Press variation verb