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I will show here that German BB's can be divided into three main types , which correspond to three points on a scale , from completely fixed and lexicalized to completely free , novel occurrences . The scale from fixed to free types is ...
I will show here that German BB's can be divided into three main types , which correspond to three points on a scale , from completely fixed and lexicalized to completely free , novel occurrences . The scale from fixed to free types is ...
Seite 848
The fact that productive morphological constructions of this type never exist in a language without syntactic analogs ... Furthermore , these four types of NI fall into an implicational hierarchy , which in turn suggests a path along ...
The fact that productive morphological constructions of this type never exist in a language without syntactic analogs ... Furthermore , these four types of NI fall into an implicational hierarchy , which in turn suggests a path along ...
Seite 874
In $$ 1-4 , we have seen that NI types are not random : they follow an implicational hierarchy . ( An examination of over 100 languages with NI has borne out this statement . ) If a language contains productive Type IV NI , it also ...
In $$ 1-4 , we have seen that NI types are not random : they follow an implicational hierarchy . ( An examination of over 100 languages with NI has borne out this statement . ) If a language contains productive Type IV NI , it also ...
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Inhalt
The English auxiliary system Yehuda N Falk | 483 |
Obligatory too in English Jeff Kaplan | 510 |
The repeated morph constraint L Menn and B MacWhinney | 519 |
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acquisition activities affix agent analysis appear argument associated child claim clause compounds consider constituents constructions contains context contrast definite derived devices dialects discourse discussion distinction elements English errors evidence example exists expressions fact formation forms function German give given grammar haplology Hebrew historical important incorporated interesting interpretation involved language learning length less lexical lexicon linguistic marked meaning names natural nominal notes nouns object occur options particular pattern phonological phrases position possible predicate present Press principles problem production properties proposed provides question reading reference responses role root rules semantic sentence similar speakers specific speech stem structure suffix suggests surface syntactic syntax tense theory topic types University verb vowel