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First , the A construction , which involves the basic spatiotemporal preposition ( ' in Dublin ' ) , always takes the verb form mae regardless of word order ; the same holds quite generally for all unproblematical adverbial predicates ...
First , the A construction , which involves the basic spatiotemporal preposition ( ' in Dublin ' ) , always takes the verb form mae regardless of word order ; the same holds quite generally for all unproblematical adverbial predicates ...
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Analyzed in this way , the Irish adverbial formation pattern represents a direct continuation of Indo - European ... Adverbials formed in this way might be based either on adjectives or on nouns , but Brugmann points out that ...
Analyzed in this way , the Irish adverbial formation pattern represents a direct continuation of Indo - European ... Adverbials formed in this way might be based either on adjectives or on nouns , but Brugmann points out that ...
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Positing an articular origin for adverbial ind / t in Insular Celtic , this would mean that the Article slot would be filled twice , with two articles . This is impossible in Celtic ( and as far as I know in most languages ) .
Positing an articular origin for adverbial ind / t in Insular Celtic , this would mean that the Article slot would be filled twice , with two articles . This is impossible in Celtic ( and as far as I know in most languages ) .
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Inhalt
JOURNAL OF THE LINGUISTIC | 399 |
A featuregeometric analysis Heidi Harley Elizabeth Ritter | 482 |
language 14761776 R W Bailey | 565 |
Urheberrecht | |
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adverbial affixes analysis appear approach argues argument authors auxiliary base Cambridge chapter claim clauses cognitive complement complex constraint constructions contains corresponding definite derived discussion distinction effects English environment evidence example existing explain expletive fact final forms frequency function future geometry given grammar impersonal infinitival involve Irish issues John language lexical linguistic listed meaning morphological natural nominal Note noun occur original participle past patterns Paul person phonological phrase plural position possible predicative preposition present Press problem pronouns properties proposed provides question reference regular relation reliability represented root rules Russian segment semantic sentences similar singular speakers specific speech structure suffix suggests syntactic syntax Table theory tion truncation University verbal verbs volume vowel Welsh