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Given information is suggested to be that which the speaker assumes to be already present in the addressee's consciousness at the time of an utterance , and an example is discussed at length . Some attention is then given to ...
Given information is suggested to be that which the speaker assumes to be already present in the addressee's consciousness at the time of an utterance , and an example is discussed at length . Some attention is then given to ...
Seite 287
At the stage where the ordering is present , the feature ( + voice ) has just entered the lexical entry , and her effort to make a voiced stop then comes in conflict with the phonotactic rule . The outcome is that she manages to produce ...
At the stage where the ordering is present , the feature ( + voice ) has just entered the lexical entry , and her effort to make a voiced stop then comes in conflict with the phonotactic rule . The outcome is that she manages to produce ...
Seite 423
It concludes that these arguments are not compelling , and that the issue of the existence of deep structure is not an empirical one at present . For several years , there has been an on - going controversy in syntactic theory involving ...
It concludes that these arguments are not compelling , and that the issue of the existence of deep structure is not an empirical one at present . For several years , there has been an on - going controversy in syntactic theory involving ...
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Inhalt
rules | 1 |
Constraints on global rules in phonology | 29 |
Phonological features problems and proposals | 52 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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 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