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-ES It is true of 1st person plural forms in general that they denote a mixed group consisting of the speaker and other ... Exploiting the fact that 1st person plurals do not refer to a group of speakers , but rather to one speaker and ...
-ES It is true of 1st person plural forms in general that they denote a mixed group consisting of the speaker and other ... Exploiting the fact that 1st person plurals do not refer to a group of speakers , but rather to one speaker and ...
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Similarly , it has been observed that in particular discourse situations , speakers occasionally use pronouns whose ... For example , in 28a , the speaker may be distancing him / herself from the situation , and in 28b , the speaker may ...
Similarly , it has been observed that in particular discourse situations , speakers occasionally use pronouns whose ... For example , in 28a , the speaker may be distancing him / herself from the situation , and in 28b , the speaker may ...
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Consequently , if Italian speakers happened to have heard a nonce verb for the first time in the 1st singular , they would not know what class the verb belongs to . But the infinitive suffix is an unambiguous indicator of the verb's ...
Consequently , if Italian speakers happened to have heard a nonce verb for the first time in the 1st singular , they would not know what class the verb belongs to . But the infinitive suffix is an unambiguous indicator of the verb's ...
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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