Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 79
Seite 10
Most authors have assumed that no distinction is made in Shakespearean English between the nominative and the oblique case of second - person pronouns used with imperatives . Jespersen , for example , states that ' after an imperative ...
Most authors have assumed that no distinction is made in Shakespearean English between the nominative and the oblique case of second - person pronouns used with imperatives . Jespersen , for example , states that ' after an imperative ...
Seite 91
20 Dixon persists in making no distinction between language and writing . At this point no one will be surprised that he makes no reference to the enormous body of literature concerned with showing how and in what respects language is ...
20 Dixon persists in making no distinction between language and writing . At this point no one will be surprised that he makes no reference to the enormous body of literature concerned with showing how and in what respects language is ...
Seite 273
But where i and ï are both used , the distinction is that of vowel harmony : gañ gö , mchỉ baủi , rigs tha , and ran gi but deņi and khyim . ( 11 ) Central Asian manuscript version of ' The story of Gyim - po Nag - cig's bride ' , India ...
But where i and ï are both used , the distinction is that of vowel harmony : gañ gö , mchỉ baủi , rigs tha , and ran gi but deņi and khyim . ( 11 ) Central Asian manuscript version of ' The story of Gyim - po Nag - cig's bride ' , India ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Inhalt
A restriction on Grassmanns Law in Greek | 7 |
Breaking umlaut and the Southern drawl | 18 |
The meaning of German noch | 42 |
Urheberrecht | |
34 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent alternation American analysis appear assume become called Chinese comparative considered consonant construction contain contrast corresponding derived dialects discussion distinction elements English evidence example expression fact final forms further German gerund give given glide grammar Hare historical indicative initial interest involved language later Latin learning lines linguistic marked meaning morpheme morphophonemic noun object occur original pair parallelism pattern phonemic phonological pitch position possible preceding present probably problem question reference represented result Review rules seems semantic sentence sequence similar song sound speaker speech stem stop stress structure suffix suggested syllable syntactic Table theory tion tone translation units University variants verb verbal vowel