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9 > • GIVEN : A referent presumed to be in the hearer's focal consciousness ( Chafe 1980 , 1987 ) . IDENTIFIABLE : The hearer is presumed to be able to identify the referent ( Du Bois 1980 ) , by situation , prior discourse , or prior ...
9 > • GIVEN : A referent presumed to be in the hearer's focal consciousness ( Chafe 1980 , 1987 ) . IDENTIFIABLE : The hearer is presumed to be able to identify the referent ( Du Bois 1980 ) , by situation , prior discourse , or prior ...
Seite 304
First , recall that anchoring makes a Head NP relevant for the hearer by explicitly relating it to a Given discourse referent . In 15 the anchoring is provided by 1 — the Head NP is made relevant for the hearer by being related to the ...
First , recall that anchoring makes a Head NP relevant for the hearer by explicitly relating it to a Given discourse referent . In 15 the anchoring is provided by 1 — the Head NP is made relevant for the hearer by being related to the ...
Seite 310
... nonidentifiable referents in the subject slot , which would otherwise violate the ' Given A Constraint ' ( which captures the discourse generalization that the agent of a transitive clause strongly tends to be ' Given ' information ...
... nonidentifiable referents in the subject slot , which would otherwise violate the ' Given A Constraint ' ( which captures the discourse generalization that the agent of a transitive clause strongly tends to be ' Given ' information ...
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Inhalt
On a possible sign advantage | 1 |
The Xbar theory of phrase structure András Kornai Geoffrey K Pullum | 24 |
Extraposition and focus Geoffrey J Huck Younghee Na | 51 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquisition agreement American analysis appear approach areas argues argument aspects assume called Cambridge chapter child claim clause Cloth communication comparative consider consistent construction contains contrast deaf demonstrate derived described dialect discourse discussion distinct English ergative evidence example fact final function gestures given grammar head historical indicate initial interesting interpretation issues John language lexical linguistic marked meaning morphology names natural nominal noted noun object occur original particular pattern person phonological phrase position possible predicate present Press principles problem produced pronouns proposed proposition provides question reading reference relation relative represented result role rules semantic sentences shows speakers speech structure suggests syntactic syntax theory tone transitive University verb volume World York