Language, Band 75,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1999 |
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... final state of the relevant subject and with which a resultative adjec- tive phrase could be associated . In other words , no position exists whose identification would yield a resultative like those in 41.40 In this way , the AS model ...
... final state of the relevant subject and with which a resultative adjec- tive phrase could be associated . In other words , no position exists whose identification would yield a resultative like those in 41.40 In this way , the AS model ...
Seite 696
... final schwas , and not by vowels protected by final consonants . The complete paradigm of Old English a - nouns is shown in Table 31 . SG NOMINATIVE stān ACCUSATIVE stän PL stānas stānas GENITIVE stanes stāna DATIVE stäne stānum TABLE ...
... final schwas , and not by vowels protected by final consonants . The complete paradigm of Old English a - nouns is shown in Table 31 . SG NOMINATIVE stān ACCUSATIVE stän PL stānas stānas GENITIVE stanes stāna DATIVE stäne stānum TABLE ...
Seite 711
... final unstressed syllables implies CEM All final syllables unstressed despite quantity differences implies SEM TABLE 49. Prosodic preference scales and principles of interpretation . 7. OTHER THEORIES OF OSL . All philological treatises ...
... final unstressed syllables implies CEM All final syllables unstressed despite quantity differences implies SEM TABLE 49. Prosodic preference scales and principles of interpretation . 7. OTHER THEORIES OF OSL . All philological treatises ...
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alternation analysis approach argument associated authors Cambridge chapter child clause close complexity consider constructions contains context contrast definite denotation dialect discourse discussion distinction Dutch effect English evidence example expressions fact final focus forms French function German given grammar halo historical interest interpretation intransitive introduction involve Island issues John language lengthening lexical linguistic marked meaning Middle morphology nasal natural nominal notes noun object occur original patient patterns phonetic phonological pitch accent position possible pragmatic predicate present Press problem processing productivity provides question reference relation relative Review role rules semantic sentence shows Smith social speakers speech structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table theory tion topic transitive University variation varieties verb volume vowel