Language, Band 51George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1975 |
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Seite 35
... indicate previous knowledge : e.g. el que sea ( SUBJ ) ' whoever that is ' ( lit. ' the ( one ) that { is , may be } ' ) ; el N que sea as in el niño que * Throughout this article I will use the following convention : IND ( = Indicative ) ...
... indicate previous knowledge : e.g. el que sea ( SUBJ ) ' whoever that is ' ( lit. ' the ( one ) that { is , may be } ' ) ; el N que sea as in el niño que * Throughout this article I will use the following convention : IND ( = Indicative ) ...
Seite 97
... indicate the addressee's status with respect to the speaker , even when the addressee has nothing to do with the actual predication . The point is , then , that we cannot understand pronominal systems if we regard them only as cognitive ...
... indicate the addressee's status with respect to the speaker , even when the addressee has nothing to do with the actual predication . The point is , then , that we cannot understand pronominal systems if we regard them only as cognitive ...
Seite 102
... indicate that the subject of the clause is coreferential to the subject of a clause of reference ; switch - subject particles indicate that the two sub- ject NP's are non - coreferential . The clause of reference may be the immediately ...
... indicate that the subject of the clause is coreferential to the subject of a clause of reference ; switch - subject particles indicate that the two sub- ject NP's are non - coreferential . The clause of reference may be the immediately ...
Inhalt
I | 1 |
Referential properties of Spanish noun phrases MaríaLuisa Rivero | 32 |
Spanish word order in nonsentence constructions Bruce G Stiehm | 49 |
Urheberrecht | |
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adjectives adverbs alternative analysis appears apply aspects associated assume beginning Chapter claim clause communication complex consider construction contains contrast defined definite deletion derived determined dialects dictionary discussion distinction elements English evidence examples existence expression fact FIGURE final formal forms function given grammar important indicate infinitives interesting interpretation interrogative involves John kind language least lexical limiting linguistic marked meaning modifier nasal natural noun NP's object occur passive pattern person phonetic phonological phrase position possible preceding predicate present Press problem pronominal proposed question reference relation relative represent requires respect restricted result rules seems semantic sentence similar sound Spanish speaker specific speech stress structure suffix suggests surface syntactic Table tags theory transformational underlying University values verb vowels