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Seite 310
Examples from Samoan and Niuean appear in 2 above and in 30 and 31 . ( 30 ) Samoan ( Mithun 1984 : 850 ) a . Po Po a : fea e tausi ai e ia tama ? Q PRED when TNS care PRN ERG he child ' When does he take care of children ? ' b .
Examples from Samoan and Niuean appear in 2 above and in 30 and 31 . ( 30 ) Samoan ( Mithun 1984 : 850 ) a . Po Po a : fea e tausi ai e ia tama ? Q PRED when TNS care PRN ERG he child ' When does he take care of children ? ' b .
Seite 357
When unaccusative subjects appear post- verbally , the preverbal position is highly likely to be filled by a ' presentational ' morpheme ( Payne's terminology ) such as muuy ' there'.20 ( 47 ) Muuy - numaa - téé - 0 - rà jaay - say ...
When unaccusative subjects appear post- verbally , the preverbal position is highly likely to be filled by a ' presentational ' morpheme ( Payne's terminology ) such as muuy ' there'.20 ( 47 ) Muuy - numaa - téé - 0 - rà jaay - say ...
Seite 771
( i ) Participial clauses cannot appear with an auxiliary in the present participial form ( ayant or étant ) , while gerunds freely do . ( ii ) The class of verbs that can appear in participial clauses is more restricted than the class ...
( i ) Participial clauses cannot appear with an auxiliary in the present participial form ( ayant or étant ) , while gerunds freely do . ( ii ) The class of verbs that can appear in participial clauses is more restricted than the class ...
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Inhalt
Kenneth N Stevens Samuel Jay Keyser | 81 |
Pidgin and creole languages | 107 |
Introduction to the theory | 115 |
Urheberrecht | |
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agreement allow analysis appear approach argues argument associated Cambridge century chapter child claim clauses clitic Cloth combination complex consider consonants constraints constructions contains contrast dative direct discourse discussion distinction double double-object effect English evidence example expressions fact final function German give given grammar head historical incorporated indicates interesting interpretation involved issues John language lexical linguistic marked Mary meaning nasal nature notes noun object occur oral original particular passives person phonology phrase position possible predicts prepositional present Press principle problem production pronoun properties proposed provides question reading reference reflexive relation relative require restricted rule semantic sentences similar specific speech structure suggests syntactic syntax Table texts theory University verb verbal vowels York