Language, Band 63George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1987 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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... clause is not governed by a lexical item if we assume that it dangles from S ; if , with Baltin 1982 , we assume that the extraposed clause is part of the VP , and so is governed by the verb , it must nonetheless be a maximal projection ...
... clause is not governed by a lexical item if we assume that it dangles from S ; if , with Baltin 1982 , we assume that the extraposed clause is part of the VP , and so is governed by the verb , it must nonetheless be a maximal projection ...
Seite 35
... clause , must- like other empty categories - be properly governed at P [ honetic ] F [ orm ] ( see below ; and cf. Weinberg et al . 1987 ) . This would entail that small clauses occur only in properly governed positions , and not as ...
... clause , must- like other empty categories - be properly governed at P [ honetic ] F [ orm ] ( see below ; and cf. Weinberg et al . 1987 ) . This would entail that small clauses occur only in properly governed positions , and not as ...
Seite 789
... clause . Relative and other subordinate clauses are counted as separate tokens from their matrix clauses , though head plus relative clause is counted as one argument of the matrix clause . There are no obvious order differences between ...
... clause . Relative and other subordinate clauses are counted as separate tokens from their matrix clauses , though head plus relative clause is counted as one argument of the matrix clause . There are no obvious order differences between ...
Inhalt
Predication and | 685 |
N Hornstein and D Lightfoot | 698 |
Boys will be boys | 871 |
Urheberrecht | |
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agreement analysis appear apply approach argues argument aspect assigned associated assume basic bound claim clause complement complex consider consistent construction contains contrast critical derived discourse discussion distinction elements English evidence examples expressions fact FIGURE final Footing formal French function given gives governed grammar important indicate interesting interpretation involved John language lexical linguistic marked meaning morphological nature nominal notes noun NP's object occur particular patterns person phonological phrase position possible predication present Press principles problem production pronoun proposed question reading reference relation relative repetition representation requires result rule seems semantic sentences simple speakers specific speech structure suffix suggests syllable syntactic syntax theory topic treatment University verb volume vowel York