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SUBTYPE ( ii - b ) : TOPIC NEGOTIATION . Speakers sometimes use a perfect at the beginning of a conversation to set up a topic . Utterances 73 and 74 are examples of such uses from the Switchboard Corpus .
SUBTYPE ( ii - b ) : TOPIC NEGOTIATION . Speakers sometimes use a perfect at the beginning of a conversation to set up a topic . Utterances 73 and 74 are examples of such uses from the Switchboard Corpus .
Seite 635
1998 : sw2010.txt ) In 76 participant A uses the perfect several other times to shift topic . ... The repeated use of the perfect to introduce or shift topics makes it unlikely that B accommodates a presupposed existing topic .
1998 : sw2010.txt ) In 76 participant A uses the perfect several other times to shift topic . ... The repeated use of the perfect to introduce or shift topics makes it unlikely that B accommodates a presupposed existing topic .
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-in ' RED - talk - ot ' ( or being object topic ' ; topic markers indicate the role of the topic - marked argument in the sentence ) . The phonological facts support the analysis of RED as a prefix as opposed to an infix ( i.e. sà : -sa ...
-in ' RED - talk - ot ' ( or being object topic ' ; topic markers indicate the role of the topic - marked argument in the sentence ) . The phonological facts support the analysis of RED as a prefix as opposed to an infix ( i.e. sà : -sa ...
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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