Language, Band 49,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1973 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 83
Seite 241
... present habitual , preterit habitual , and imperfect habitual . The analysis connected with this chart also raises ... present participle ( also analysable as the adverbial thematic suffix -pa plus -ri ) ; ( 2 ) -kata , the past ...
... present habitual , preterit habitual , and imperfect habitual . The analysis connected with this chart also raises ... present participle ( also analysable as the adverbial thematic suffix -pa plus -ri ) ; ( 2 ) -kata , the past ...
Seite 325
... present marker [ e ] , and the 2pl . desinence [ te ] . Verbs that form the present tense without a verbaliz- ing suffix exhibit stress patterns that are somewhat more varied than those of other verbs . I shall therefore first examine ...
... present marker [ e ] , and the 2pl . desinence [ te ] . Verbs that form the present tense without a verbaliz- ing suffix exhibit stress patterns that are somewhat more varied than those of other verbs . I shall therefore first examine ...
Seite 328
... present forms , I rejected it in favor of the solution sketched above . 4.2 . Verbs that have verbalizing suffixes in the strings underlying their present forms exhibit the three stress patterns illustrated in Table 10. The forms cited ...
... present forms , I rejected it in favor of the solution sketched above . 4.2 . Verbs that have verbalizing suffixes in the strings underlying their present forms exhibit the three stress patterns illustrated in Table 10. The forms cited ...
Inhalt
nology | 67 |
The role of surface phonetic constraints in generative | 87 |
English pronouns | 121 |
Urheberrecht | |
11 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjectives alternative analysis appear apply assume becomes chapter claim clause comparative consider consistent consonant constituent constraints constructions contains corresponding deep derived dialects direction discussion distinction elements English evidence examples fact FIGURE final focus formal forms further given gives grammar important indicate initial interesting interpretation involved John kind language latter lexical linguistic marked markers meaning memory mutational natural negative nominal noted noun object occur original past patterns person phonetic phonological phrase position possible present Press principle problem pronoun proposed question reference relations relative representation represented require respectively result rule seems semantic sentence sequences similar simple speakers Stage stem stress structure suffix suggest surface syntactic Table tense theory tion transformational underlying University verb vowel