Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 84
Seite 3
Shut it , if you like ) —to highly ambiguous sentences where the IF is shown only by the non - linguistic ... So it might not be completely misleading , even though it may be slightly inaccurate , to say that any sentence can have any ...
Shut it , if you like ) —to highly ambiguous sentences where the IF is shown only by the non - linguistic ... So it might not be completely misleading , even though it may be slightly inaccurate , to say that any sentence can have any ...
Seite 4
intermediate properties SEMANTIC , on a par with the standard semantic properties such as referential indices and semantic features , which define the propositional content of the sentence . ILLOCUTIONARY MEANING AND SEMANTICS 2.1 .
intermediate properties SEMANTIC , on a par with the standard semantic properties such as referential indices and semantic features , which define the propositional content of the sentence . ILLOCUTIONARY MEANING AND SEMANTICS 2.1 .
Seite 75
Such values are applied to the unit of the verb construction as a whole , not to the pronoun by itself , and the placement of the unit is better studied at the level of the sentence . Another case of free order involving a verb ...
Such values are applied to the unit of the verb construction as a whole , not to the pronoun by itself , and the placement of the unit is better studied at the level of the sentence . Another case of free order involving a verb ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Inhalt
I | 1 |
Referential properties of Spanish noun phrases MariaLuisa Rivero | 32 |
Spanish word order in nonsentence constructions Bruce G Stiehm | 49 |
Urheberrecht | |
21 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjectives alternative analysis appears apply argument aspects associated assume beginning Chapter claim clause communication complex consider consonant constructions contains contrast definite deletion derived determined dialects direct discussion distinction elements English evidence examples existence expression fact FIGURE final formal forms function given grammar important indicate infinitives initial interpretation involves John language lexical limiting linguistic marked meaning modifier nasal natural Note noun NP's object occur passive pattern person phonetic phonological phrase plural position possible preceding predicate present problem pronominal pronouns proposed question reference relation relative represent requires respect restricted result rule seems segment semantic sentence similar sound Spanish speaker specific stress structure suffix suggests surface syllable syntactic Table tense theory transformation underlying University values verb vowels Wichita