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nonspecific readings are due to the NP's being interpreted in the low position . ... In the ( a ) cases , we have only a nonspecific reading of the direct object , whereas in the ( b ) cases , we get only a specific reading of the ...
nonspecific readings are due to the NP's being interpreted in the low position . ... In the ( a ) cases , we have only a nonspecific reading of the direct object , whereas in the ( b ) cases , we get only a specific reading of the ...
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( single book ) We have seen that 22a forces a nonspecific reading of the object , whereas 22b forces a specific reading of the object . The two readings of a noncasemarked object are based on surface position .
( single book ) We have seen that 22a forces a nonspecific reading of the object , whereas 22b forces a specific reading of the object . The two readings of a noncasemarked object are based on surface position .
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At each word , the reading time predicted by the participant's regression equation was subtracted from the actual measured reading time , and all analyses were performed on these differences ( residual reading times ) .
At each word , the reading time predicted by the participant's regression equation was subtracted from the actual measured reading time , and all analyses were performed on these differences ( residual reading times ) .
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Inhalt
Letters to Language | 1 |
eLanguage | 9 |
Enhancement and overlap in the speech chain Samuel Jay Keyser Kenneth Noble Stevens | 33 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent adjectives agreement American analysis appear approach argues argument binomials British Cambridge chapters clause collective complete condition consider consonant constraints constructions contains context contrast corpus derived determined discourse discussion distinction distribution effects English evidence example experiment expression fact focus frequency function geminates gesture given grammar indicates inflection interpretation involve issues John Journal language lexical linguistic marking meaning morphology names nature negative notes noun object occur paradigm particular pattern phonological phrase pitch accents plural position possible predicts present Press production pronouns properties proposed provides question reading reference relative rule semantic sentences similar singular speakers specific speech stem stress structure suggest syntactic syntax Table theory tion translation types University variation verb voiced vowel