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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... evidence in evaluating linguistic hypotheses . 1. EVIDENCE FOR COMPETENCE AND PERFORMANCE MODELS . Traditionally , lin- guists have looked at data from language itself as evidence for the evaluation of posited theories of grammar , and ...
... evidence in evaluating linguistic hypotheses . 1. EVIDENCE FOR COMPETENCE AND PERFORMANCE MODELS . Traditionally , lin- guists have looked at data from language itself as evidence for the evaluation of posited theories of grammar , and ...
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... evidence to support or invalidate some hypothesis . It is difficult to understand why linguists would regard data on aphasia or other kinds of abnormal language ( e.g. that of Alzheimer patients , autistic chil- dren , schizophrenics ...
... evidence to support or invalidate some hypothesis . It is difficult to understand why linguists would regard data on aphasia or other kinds of abnormal language ( e.g. that of Alzheimer patients , autistic chil- dren , schizophrenics ...
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... evidence presented in this paper . I shall argue , however , that the Px's are best analysed as true suffixes . In a variety of ways , they behave much more like affixes than clitics ; a clitic analysis runs into damaging evidence from ...
... evidence presented in this paper . I shall argue , however , that the Px's are best analysed as true suffixes . In a variety of ways , they behave much more like affixes than clitics ; a clitic analysis runs into damaging evidence from ...
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