Language, Band 53,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1977 |
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... specific number of languages to examine that three specific orderings out of the six possible ones will never turn up as the basic word order of any of the languages examined . Clearly , if we examine just one language , we have a 3/6 ...
... specific number of languages to examine that three specific orderings out of the six possible ones will never turn up as the basic word order of any of the languages examined . Clearly , if we examine just one language , we have a 3/6 ...
Seite 900
... specific NP's . An example is the object NP here : ( 3 ) John is looking for a unicorn . Such a sentence is normally considered ambiguous between a reading where there is a particular unicorn which John is looking for ( the specific or ...
... specific NP's . An example is the object NP here : ( 3 ) John is looking for a unicorn . Such a sentence is normally considered ambiguous between a reading where there is a particular unicorn which John is looking for ( the specific or ...
Seite 970
... specific word will require the double task of referring to the alphabetical index ( to appear in Vol . 4 , together with the French ' Répertoire ' ) and then to the chrono- logical dictionary itself . This arrangement may have been ...
... specific word will require the double task of referring to the alphabetical index ( to appear in Vol . 4 , together with the French ' Répertoire ' ) and then to the chrono- logical dictionary itself . This arrangement may have been ...
Inhalt
Another glance at main clause phenomena Dwight Bolinger | 511 |
Amount relatives Greg N Carlson | 520 |
Where do cleft sentences come from? Jeannette K Gundel | 543 |
Urheberrecht | |
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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 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 noun NP's null hypothesis object okusan Pāṇini 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 samples 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