Language, Band 53,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1977 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 16
Seite 592
... hypothesis to this theory , if necessary . If some true generalization follows logically from the corpus of ... null hypothesis ' . In this paper , where I speak simply of ' hypotheses ' , I exclude the null hypothesis . Now ...
... hypothesis to this theory , if necessary . If some true generalization follows logically from the corpus of ... null hypothesis ' . In this paper , where I speak simply of ' hypotheses ' , I exclude the null hypothesis . Now ...
Seite 597
... null hypothesis is that all six possible orderings are equally likely to occur as the basic word order of an arbitrary language . We now ask what the probability is given the null hypothesis , and given a specific number of languages to ...
... null hypothesis is that all six possible orderings are equally likely to occur as the basic word order of an arbitrary language . We now ask what the probability is given the null hypothesis , and given a specific number of languages to ...
Seite 612
... null hypothesis : there is not much differ- ence between 30 % and 0.341 - the figure arrived at in §3.32 for the probability , given the null hypothesis , that a class of vowels involved in an arbitrary phono- logical process will be ...
... null hypothesis : there is not much differ- ence between 30 % and 0.341 - the figure arrived at in §3.32 for the probability , given the null hypothesis , that a class of vowels involved in an arbitrary phono- logical process will be ...
Inhalt
Dwight Bolinger | 511 |
Greg N Carlson | 520 |
Jeannette K Gundel | 543 |
Urheberrecht | |
18 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adverbials Akmajian analysis appear apply AR's argument Aspects grammar assume assumptions auxiliary Beauce Bresnan Chomsky Chomsky's claim cleft sentences clitics complement compounds consonant constituent constraints context count noun DEIXIS deletion derived dialects discussion distinction Dwight Bolinger English example expression fact feature FIGURE formal French function given grammar grammatical relations hypothesis interpretation involved John language lexical linguistic main verb meaning modals Montague grammar morpheme nature node nominal nouns NP's null hypothesis object okusan paper parentheses passive phonetic phonological phrases position possible prediction Press principle problem pronoun proposed pseudo-clefts quantifiers question Raising reference relational grammar relationship relative clause relevant RR's rules sannin Schane semantic semiotics sensei significance speakers specific speech stress SU-NOM surface structure syllable symbols syntactic syntax tense theory tion topic transformational transformational grammar underlying structures University vowels words