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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... VERB . If a language has Compound NI , the com- plex verb is expected to be intransitive when a direct object is incorporated , and thus should behave like any intransitive verb in the language . The evidence on case marking in the ...
... VERB . If a language has Compound NI , the com- plex verb is expected to be intransitive when a direct object is incorporated , and thus should behave like any intransitive verb in the language . The evidence on case marking in the ...
Seite 540
... verb morphology are not independent of one another . When such verbs occur with a number - bearing suffix , the two must be compatible . That is , if a verb stem is sg , like ' aw ' in 8a , a pl verb suffix is impossible ; similarly , if a ...
... verb morphology are not independent of one another . When such verbs occur with a number - bearing suffix , the two must be compatible . That is , if a verb stem is sg , like ' aw ' in 8a , a pl verb suffix is impossible ; similarly , if a ...
Seite 557
... verbs underdetermine the subject in the argument structure . A verb that requires an object - marked form must be accompanied by such a form , not by a number - marked or possessive - marked form ; yet , except for weather expres- sions , ...
... verbs underdetermine the subject in the argument structure . A verb that requires an object - marked form must be accompanied by such a form , not by a number - marked or possessive - marked form ; yet , except for weather expres- sions , ...
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