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Seite 25
The evolution of schematic hierarchies such as these supports the view that general and particular units co - exist in ... etc. immediately lose their unit status ( cease to be established concepts ) as soon as [ TOOL ] gains it .
The evolution of schematic hierarchies such as these supports the view that general and particular units co - exist in ... etc. immediately lose their unit status ( cease to be established concepts ) as soon as [ TOOL ] gains it .
Seite 26
Of course , non - unit elements can quickly gain unit status once the speaker has occasion to employ them ; as they do , they become by definition conventional linguistic units , and are included as part of the grammar of the language .
Of course , non - unit elements can quickly gain unit status once the speaker has occasion to employ them ; as they do , they become by definition conventional linguistic units , and are included as part of the grammar of the language .
Seite 40
The grammar of a language is defined as a structured inventory of conventional linguistic units . This inventory is structured in the sense that some units function as components of others . Thus ( d ) is a component of the composite ...
The grammar of a language is defined as a structured inventory of conventional linguistic units . This inventory is structured in the sense that some units function as components of others . Thus ( d ) is a component of the composite ...
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active acts addressees adverbs analysis appear approach argument Barbara base basic called Chap Charles claim clause combination complements complex components consider constituent construction contains context contrast conversation defined derived described direct discourse discussion distinction English evidence examples expressions fact final function given grammar Guaraní illocutionary important indicate interesting interpretation involved John kind language lexical linguistic logical marked meaning natural nominal noted notion object occur operators participants particular passive past performed phonological position possible pragmatic predicate present Press problem question reference relation relative represent request role rules seems semantic sense sentence shows speaker specific speech spoken structure suggests syntactic syntax theory thing Topic turn units University utterance verb vowel written