Language, Band 53,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1977 |
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Seite 562
... speech ' . We tend to class an utterance as ' real ' if we feel that it was INTENDED as real speech . But since we often cannot tell what the child intended , we fall back on what we think the child is capable of producing - i.e . on ...
... speech ' . We tend to class an utterance as ' real ' if we feel that it was INTENDED as real speech . But since we often cannot tell what the child intended , we fall back on what we think the child is capable of producing - i.e . on ...
Seite 563
... speech was quite fluent , and his family seemed to understand him most of the time . Gradually I realized that Minh was actually producing at least two distinct kinds of speech . The first kind , the one I expected to find , was the ...
... speech was quite fluent , and his family seemed to understand him most of the time . Gradually I realized that Minh was actually producing at least two distinct kinds of speech . The first kind , the one I expected to find , was the ...
Seite 724
... speech and the corresponding ao , aм are coefficients , each of which embodies effects of the glottis , vocal - tract , and lip models . The term e ( n ) is the impulse which drives the glottis from the nth speech sample . If one wishes ...
... speech and the corresponding ao , aм are coefficients , each of which embodies effects of the glottis , vocal - tract , and lip models . The term e ( n ) is the impulse which drives the glottis from the nth speech sample . If one wishes ...
Inhalt
Dwight Bolinger | 511 |
Greg N Carlson | 520 |
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 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