Language, Band 50,Ausgaben 1-3Linguistic Society of America, 1974 |
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Seite 81
... occur : nouns denoting body parts , e.g. , occur in sentences of the general type ' X verb Y on the Z ' , where Z denotes the inalienable noun . Thus in English we can say John kissed Mary on the cheek , but not * John kissed Mary on ...
... occur : nouns denoting body parts , e.g. , occur in sentences of the general type ' X verb Y on the Z ' , where Z denotes the inalienable noun . Thus in English we can say John kissed Mary on the cheek , but not * John kissed Mary on ...
Seite 92
... occur initially ; no obstruents occur finally . The alveolar is the least attested of the stops , and has disappeared in most Dravidian languages in favor of the five - stop pattern which is the South Asian areal norm : contrastive ...
... occur initially ; no obstruents occur finally . The alveolar is the least attested of the stops , and has disappeared in most Dravidian languages in favor of the five - stop pattern which is the South Asian areal norm : contrastive ...
Seite 317
... occur even if they do not in fact , their non - occurrence simply constitutes a fortuitous gap among possible idioms of this kind , and in no way invalidates the hypothesis . On the other hand , since come should not be able to occur ...
... occur even if they do not in fact , their non - occurrence simply constitutes a fortuitous gap among possible idioms of this kind , and in no way invalidates the hypothesis . On the other hand , since come should not be able to occur ...
Inhalt
rules | 1 |
Constraints on global rules in phonology | 29 |
Phonological features problems and proposals | 52 |
Urheberrecht | |
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adjectives alternative analysis appear apply assumed Chomsky claim complex condition considered consonants constraints containing context contrast course deep deletion derived determined dialect discussion distinction English environment evidence examples fact final function given grammar human hypothesis important indicate interpretation involved John kind language later learning lexical linguistic marked meaning MICHIGAN natural normal noted nouns object observed occur phonetic phonological pitch position possible precedence predict present Press principle probably problem pronouns proposed question reason reference relations relative representations represented respect restriction result rule seems segment semantic sentences sequences speakers specific speech standard stress string structure suggested syntactic theory tion tone transformational underlying University variable verb vowel York