Language, Band 65George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1989 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 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 ...
Seite 438
... claim that focussed elements cannot be scram- bled and the claim that NP - scrambling never gives rise to parasitic gaps . KLAUS NETTER ( 356-410 ) applies Ronald Kaplan & Annie Zae- nen's ideas on Functional Uncertainty in LFG to ...
... claim that focussed elements cannot be scram- bled and the claim that NP - scrambling never gives rise to parasitic gaps . KLAUS NETTER ( 356-410 ) applies Ronald Kaplan & Annie Zae- nen's ideas on Functional Uncertainty in LFG to ...
Inhalt
The notion of source in language | 1 |
Maturation and the acquisition of the Sesotho passive Katherine Demuth | 56 |
Pidgin and creole languages | 107 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acquisition adverbial agreement Algonquian analysis anaphoric appear argues argument structure bilingual c-command Cambridge chapter child Chomsky clauses clitic clitic doubling Cloth complement complex consonants constraints constructions context contrast coronal creole dative dialects direct object discourse discussion double double-object form English epistemic evidence example fact function German grammar guage historical historical linguistics incorporated INFL interpretation inversion John language Linguistic Society Luiseño marked Mary meaning morpheme morphological nasal nasal consonants nasal vowels nominal noun obstruent oral palatalization paper phonetic phonology phrase plural position possible pragmatic predicts prepositional present principle pronoun properties proposed reference reflexive reflexive pronouns relation restricted rule segments semantic sentences Sesotho sociolinguistic sonorant speakers speech suffix syntactic syntax texts theory topic Tzotzil unaccusative unaccusative verbs Underspecification University Press velar verb verbal passives vowels word order xchi?uk Yagua York