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Seite 106
John ga Mary ni hon o yatta to book gave ' John gave Mary a book . ' b . John ga hon o Mary ni yatta . ' John gave a book to Mary . ' c . Mary ni John ga hon o yatta . ' To Mary John gave a book . ' d . Mary ni hon o John ga yatta .
John ga Mary ni hon o yatta to book gave ' John gave Mary a book . ' b . John ga hon o Mary ni yatta . ' John gave a book to Mary . ' c . Mary ni John ga hon o yatta . ' To Mary John gave a book . ' d . Mary ni hon o John ga yatta .
Seite 355
Thus a noun may be proper and human ( e.g. John ) , proper and non - human ( Egypt ) , common and human ( boy ) , or common and non - human ( book ) . As Chomsky points out , a feature analysis of lexical categories permits one to ...
Thus a noun may be proper and human ( e.g. John ) , proper and non - human ( Egypt ) , common and human ( boy ) , or common and non - human ( book ) . As Chomsky points out , a feature analysis of lexical categories permits one to ...
Seite 367
Wow , took John Mary to a great party ! ( 33 ) a . Seldom did John take Mary to a party . b . ... claim by H concerns the account his grammar provides of the ungrammaticalness of strings like ( 37 ) * Who did John give a present ?
Wow , took John Mary to a great party ! ( 33 ) a . Seldom did John take Mary to a party . b . ... claim by H concerns the account his grammar provides of the ungrammaticalness of strings like ( 37 ) * Who did John give a present ?
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alternation analysis appear apply argument aspect attempt basic called Chapter claim clause color communication comparative concerned consider consonant constituents constructions contains contrast definition derived described detail dialects discussion distinction English evidence examples expressions fact final formation forms function gerunds give given grammar historical important indicates interesting involved John language least less lexical linguistic marked meaning natural node nominal noted nouns object occur original particular pattern person phonological position possible present Press problem proposed question reading reason reference relative represented rules seems semantic sentences social speakers speech standard stem structure suffix suggests surface syntactic syntax Table theory topics transformational underlying University usage verb volume vowel