Language, Band 45,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1969 |
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Seite 488
... nature of what they are supposed to explicate . It is particularly dangerous to employ mechanical models as ways of describing the nature of language and the presumed manner in which the human brain functions in encoding or decoding ...
... nature of what they are supposed to explicate . It is particularly dangerous to employ mechanical models as ways of describing the nature of language and the presumed manner in which the human brain functions in encoding or decoding ...
Seite 508
... nature of the proto - language are entirely inferential or analytical , and not assumptive , unless we are prepared to yield the inductive nature of the proto - language . A definition of the term ' comparative method ' , as that term ...
... nature of the proto - language are entirely inferential or analytical , and not assumptive , unless we are prepared to yield the inductive nature of the proto - language . A definition of the term ' comparative method ' , as that term ...
Seite 639
... nature of representation : ' Language cannot be saddled with the absurd task of redupli- cating reality ' ( 121 ) . If it is realized that the purpose of any system of repre- sentation is not to ' evoke ' its object , but to ' say true ...
... nature of representation : ' Language cannot be saddled with the absurd task of redupli- cating reality ' ( 121 ) . If it is realized that the purpose of any system of repre- sentation is not to ' evoke ' its object , but to ' say true ...
Inhalt
Abschnitt 1 | 499 |
Abschnitt 2 | 519 |
Abschnitt 3 | 529 |
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acceptable actually alternations analysis appear apply assume assumption base Black Chomsky clause clear common comparative complete concerned considered consonant contain contraction convention corresponding course defined deletion derived described dialects discussion distinction English environment evidence example expression fact Figure final forms formulation function future give given grammar important indicate interpretation involved John language least lenition lexical linguistic listed marked meaning mirror image morphemes morphophonemic nature noun occur Paragoge past phonemic phonological phrase position possible preceding prefixes present problem proposed question reason reconstruction reference regarded relation relative represented respect result rule seems segments semantic sentences sequences single speakers specifiers speech statement stems stress structure tense theory tion transformational translation University verb voiced vowel