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Why should control infinitives of impersonal predicates and dative passives be only marginally possible in German when there are fewer restrictions on their occurrence in Icelandic ? We believe that this difference resides in the ...
Why should control infinitives of impersonal predicates and dative passives be only marginally possible in German when there are fewer restrictions on their occurrence in Icelandic ? We believe that this difference resides in the ...
Seite 860
Before we conclude the German section of this article , we must discuss two additional properties of German impersonal constructions that have been taken to support the nonsubject status of subject - like obliques in that language .
Before we conclude the German section of this article , we must discuss two additional properties of German impersonal constructions that have been taken to support the nonsubject status of subject - like obliques in that language .
Seite 999
Following the first two volumes ( 1998 , 2000 ; for reviews on these two volumes , see Language 76.464-65 and 78.360 ) of a revised and expanded edition of Sprachgeschichte ( the history of the [ German ] language ; the first edition ...
Following the first two volumes ( 1998 , 2000 ; for reviews on these two volumes , see Language 76.464-65 and 78.360 ) of a revised and expanded edition of Sprachgeschichte ( the history of the [ German ] language ; the first edition ...
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Inhalt
Letters to Language | 561 |
A styled farewell and a new era | 564 |
Lexicon vs syntax Kazuhiko Fukushima | 568 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accepted acquisition alliteration alternation analysis animacy appear approach argues argument Cambridge claim clauses cognitive compounds consider construction context contrast definitive determined direct discussion distinction distribution effects English evidence example fact factors formal frequency function German given grammar head human important interpretation involving irregular irregular verbs issues Japanese John language lexical linguistic marking meaning morphological nature nominative Note noun object oblique observed occur Participant patterns person phonetic phonological plural position possessor possible predicates present Press pronoun properties proposed provides question raising reference regular relations relative relative clauses respect role rules s-genitive semantic sentences shows similar speakers speech structure suggests syntactic syntax Table theory tion types University V-V compounds variation verbs vowel weight