Language, Band 65,Ausgaben 1-2Linguistic Society of America, 1989 |
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Seite 56
... claims of Borer & Wexler . * 1. INTRODUCTION . The acquisition of English passives has long been a topic of great ... claim on the fact that , in Hebrew , adjectival passives are acquired long before verbal passives . In this paper ...
... claims of Borer & Wexler . * 1. INTRODUCTION . The acquisition of English passives has long been a topic of great ... claim on the fact that , in Hebrew , adjectival passives are acquired long before verbal passives . In this paper ...
Seite 62
... claim that early English passives are actually adjectival rather than verbal . The Se- sotho findings are interesting in this regard : by - phrases were used in 39 % of all passives at Stage I , 25 % at Stage II , and 15 % at Stage III ...
... claim that early English passives are actually adjectival rather than verbal . The Se- sotho findings are interesting in this regard : by - phrases were used in 39 % of all passives at Stage I , 25 % at Stage II , and 15 % at Stage III ...
Seite 63
... claim that English adjectival passives are derived only from action ( not nonaction ) verbs , and that the preference for early passivization of action verbs shows that early English passives are actually adjectival rather than ver- bal ...
... claim that English adjectival passives are derived only from action ( not nonaction ) verbs , and that the preference for early passivization of action verbs shows that early English passives are actually adjectival rather than ver- bal ...
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acquisition adult agents allow analysis appear apply approach argues argument assigned associated Cambridge cause chapter child claim clauses clitic combinations complex considered consonants constraint constructions contains continuant coronal dative definite direct discourse discussion distinction double double-object form early English epistemic evidence example expressions fact function German give given grammar head historical incorporated interesting involving John kind language lexical linguistic Mari marked meaning morphological natural notes noun object occur original palatalization passives phonology phrase position possible predicted prepositional present Press principle problem productive properties proposed question reference relations relative require restrictions result rule segments semantic sentences specific speech structure suggest syntactic syntax Table theory University verb verbal voicing volume vowel Yagua