Language, Band 80,Ausgaben 1-2Linguistic Society of America, 2004 |
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Seite 46
3.1 . SUBJECTS OF NON - VERBAL PREDICATES . While overt subjects with verbs are not produced early on , it is not the case that there is any sort of general ban on subjects . Thus , during the period in which verbs do not occur with ...
3.1 . SUBJECTS OF NON - VERBAL PREDICATES . While overt subjects with verbs are not produced early on , it is not the case that there is any sort of general ban on subjects . Thus , during the period in which verbs do not occur with ...
Seite 47
... overt subject languages were the earliest available in their corpora , and the children consistently used overt subjects even in these earliest recording sessions . " The MLUS of the four Catalan - speaking children in the recording ...
... overt subject languages were the earliest available in their corpora , and the children consistently used overt subjects even in these earliest recording sessions . " The MLUS of the four Catalan - speaking children in the recording ...
Seite 49
... overt subject languages use overt subjects while children speaking Spanish and Catalan do not . I take this to be evidence of fundamentally different developmental sequences in the two language groups . 5. A PREVIOUS ACCOUNT AND THE ...
... overt subject languages use overt subjects while children speaking Spanish and Catalan do not . I take this to be evidence of fundamentally different developmental sequences in the two language groups . 5. A PREVIOUS ACCOUNT AND THE ...
Inhalt
L Yu | 73 |
Sharon Peperkamp | 98 |
Peter W Culicover | 127 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Amsterdam analysis appear approach argues aspect Cambridge chapter child clause cognitive communication comparative condition consider consonant constructions contains context contrast cues deferred dependency discourse discussion domain effects English evidence example exceptions expressions fact factors final French function given grammar historical human important infants interesting internal interpretation involved issues John Benjamins Journal lexical linguistics Malkiel marking meaning metathesis morphology nature noun objects observed occur overt subjects Oxford particle particular patterns perception phonaesthemes phonetic phonological phrases position possible pragmatic prediction present Press priming processing properties proposal question reference result role semantic shows signed languages similar sound Spanish speakers speech spoken stop stress structure syntactic syntax Tabasaran Table theory tion topic transfer University University Press verb voicing words