Language, Band 71,Ausgaben 1-2Linguistic Society of America, 1995 |
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Seite 164
... pronoun usage in the two different genres . F finds that the level and nature of embedding in the discourse structure appears to have little influence on use of pronouns in the conversational data , thus resulting in ex- tremely long ...
... pronoun usage in the two different genres . F finds that the level and nature of embedding in the discourse structure appears to have little influence on use of pronouns in the conversational data , thus resulting in ex- tremely long ...
Seite 165
... pronouns in English , and ( 2 ) rules which determine when a pronoun can be used are genre - dependent . A central tenet of her work , as in much of the recent work on anaphora , is that NPs whose referents are ' in focus ' can be ...
... pronouns in English , and ( 2 ) rules which determine when a pronoun can be used are genre - dependent . A central tenet of her work , as in much of the recent work on anaphora , is that NPs whose referents are ' in focus ' can be ...
Seite 330
... pronoun and the full noun phrase , both to facilitate the construal of the full noun phrase as a reference point and to minimize the possibility that the pronoun will be so construed . In a study of 500 examples of backward anaphora ...
... pronoun and the full noun phrase , both to facilitate the construal of the full noun phrase as a reference point and to minimize the possibility that the pronoun will be so construed . In a study of 500 examples of backward anaphora ...
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Abschnitt 2 | 9 |
Abschnitt 3 | 10 |
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addition analysis ANIM appear apply approach argues argument Cambridge chapter clause cognitive complement complex compound conception concerned consider constructions context contrast contribution described determined discourse discussion distinction domain effect English examples expect expression fact final function given grammar hearer instance interesting introducing involving issues John kind language linguistic marking meaning metrical morphological nature nominal noted notion noun object operations particular person phonological phrase position possible predicts present Press principles problem prominence pronoun properties proposed provides question raising reference reflexive relation relationship represented requires result role rule semantic sentence single situation speaker specific speech stem stress structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table theory tion transitive University variation verb volume York