Language, Band 68George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1992 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
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Seite 150
... suggests that contour segments are therefore not parallel to contour tones , where the tones are decomposable into level tones that exist independently in the lan- guage . His second type of evidence comes from phonological rules : he ...
... suggests that contour segments are therefore not parallel to contour tones , where the tones are decomposable into level tones that exist independently in the lan- guage . His second type of evidence comes from phonological rules : he ...
Seite 203
... suggests that UG is unavailable to the L2 learner ; he proposes instead that the learner must resort to general ... suggesting that UG is available during L2 acquisition and therefore that L2 acquisition is not accomplished simply though ...
... suggests that UG is unavailable to the L2 learner ; he proposes instead that the learner must resort to general ... suggesting that UG is available during L2 acquisition and therefore that L2 acquisition is not accomplished simply though ...
Seite 788
... suggest that D - structure and LF developed IN ORDER FOR predicate - argument relations and quantifier - scope relations to be expressed iconically . I think that Givón is on the right track when he suggests that , ' all other things ...
... suggest that D - structure and LF developed IN ORDER FOR predicate - argument relations and quantifier - scope relations to be expressed iconically . I think that Givón is on the right track when he suggests that , ' all other things ...
Inhalt
The Arabic linguistic | 390 |
Sociolinguistics and second language acquisition E Tarone | 396 |
Learning and cognition The acquisition | 402 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accepted acquisition alternative American analysis appear approach argues argument Cambridge chapter claim clause Cloth comparative complement complex consider consonant constituent constructions contains context contrast correlation derived dialect discussion distinction effects elements English errors evidence example existential expression fact focus French function given grammar head important interesting interpretation involved issues Japanese John language lexical linguistic locative major meaning morphology native nature notes noun object occur pairs patterners phoneme phonological phrase position possible precede predicted present Press Principle problem pronoun proposed question reference relation relative representation represented respect role rules segments semantic sentences speakers specified speech structure suggests syntactic syntax Table theoretical theory topic University variables verb vowels yers York