Language, Band 49,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1973 |
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Seite 7
... apply before QP and hence before the end of the syntactic cycle , in order for 46 to be accepted , but it would also have to apply after each syntactic cycle , in order for 47 to be ac- cepted ; furthermore , if it had applied once , it ...
... apply before QP and hence before the end of the syntactic cycle , in order for 46 to be accepted , but it would also have to apply after each syntactic cycle , in order for 47 to be ac- cepted ; furthermore , if it had applied once , it ...
Seite 71
... apply at any point , and that each applies to the underlying representation , not to the string formed by application of the last applied rule . Postal ( 1968 : 141-3 ) considers just three possibilities : ( 1 ) random and ( 2 ) ...
... apply at any point , and that each applies to the underlying representation , not to the string formed by application of the last applied rule . Postal ( 1968 : 141-3 ) considers just three possibilities : ( 1 ) random and ( 2 ) ...
Seite 90
... apply at the phonetic level . There are also cases where severe constraints at the phonetic level do not apply at the lexical level . E.g. , the German SPC 2 does not apply at the abstract level , since morphophonemic alternations like ...
... apply at the phonetic level . There are also cases where severe constraints at the phonetic level do not apply at the lexical level . E.g. , the German SPC 2 does not apply at the abstract level , since morphophonemic alternations like ...
Inhalt
I | 1 |
Focus and relativization | 19 |
A structural principle of language and its implications | 47 |
Urheberrecht | |
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adjectives alternative analysis appear apply assume becomes Chapter clause cognitive common comparative complex considered consonant constituent constraints constructions contains corresponding deep derived dialects discussion distinction effect elements English evidence examples fact FIGURE final focus formal forms further given grammar important indicate initial interesting interpretation involved John kind language lexical linguistic marked marker meaning memory Metatony morphological mutational nature negative nominative noted noun object occur original participle past patterns person phonetic phonological position possible predictable present Press principle problem pronoun proposed questions reference relations relative representation represented require respectively result rule seems semantic sentences shown similar simply speakers Stage stem stress structure suffix suggest surface syntactic Table tense theory tion transformational underlying University verb vowel