Language, Band 44,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1968 |
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... syntactic description " , and take a syntactic description of a sentence to be an ( abstract ) object of some sort , associated with the sentence , that uniquely determines its semantic interpretation ( the latter notion being left ...
... syntactic description " , and take a syntactic description of a sentence to be an ( abstract ) object of some sort , associated with the sentence , that uniquely determines its semantic interpretation ( the latter notion being left ...
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... syntactic : his reason for asserting a particular grammatical relation to hold in an example appears to be simply that there are other items containing tokens of the same LEXICAL ITEMS standing in the same SEMANTIC RELATIONS as in the ...
... syntactic : his reason for asserting a particular grammatical relation to hold in an example appears to be simply that there are other items containing tokens of the same LEXICAL ITEMS standing in the same SEMANTIC RELATIONS as in the ...
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... syntactic description of Aspects : the difference between that and the ' trans- formational grammar ' of Syntactic structures is comparable in magnitude to that between ' extended phrase structure grammar ' and the ' phrase structure ...
... syntactic description of Aspects : the difference between that and the ' trans- formational grammar ' of Syntactic structures is comparable in magnitude to that between ' extended phrase structure grammar ' and the ' phrase structure ...
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alternations analysis appear apply become called clause clear cluster comparative completely condition considered consonant construction contains correspondences derived described dialects discussion distinction element English environment evidence example expression fact final forms function further German given gives grammar historical included indicate instances interpretation involved language later linguistic marked meaning morpheme morphophonemic nature nominal noted noun occur original pattern phonemic phonological phrase position possible preceding present problem proposed question reason reconstructed reference reflex relation relative represent representation restriction result rules seems segment semantic sense sentence similar simply single sound stops stress structure style suffix suggested syntactic Table theory tion transformations underlying units University verb voiced vowel