Language, Band 84,Ausgaben 1-4Linguistic Society of America, 2008 |
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Seite 2
... speakers as zì . Under the classical lexicalist hypothesis Aronoff dis- cusses , all speakers should care primarily about words , but Chinese speakers actually care more about a lower - level unit , zì , even though words do exist in ...
... speakers as zì . Under the classical lexicalist hypothesis Aronoff dis- cusses , all speakers should care primarily about words , but Chinese speakers actually care more about a lower - level unit , zì , even though words do exist in ...
Seite 104
... speakers also become more evident . The structures seen here show variation along all of these dimensions . Discourse use of the Navajo = go con- struction , for example , like that of the Woods Cree conjunct , tends to be more frequent ...
... speakers also become more evident . The structures seen here show variation along all of these dimensions . Discourse use of the Navajo = go con- struction , for example , like that of the Woods Cree conjunct , tends to be more frequent ...
Seite 645
... speakers who say what they mean and mean what they say , it's got to be the proposed rule that's wrong , not the usage . ... Grammar rules must ultimately be based on facts about how people speak and write . If they don't have that ...
... speakers who say what they mean and mean what they say , it's got to be the proposed rule that's wrong , not the usage . ... Grammar rules must ultimately be based on facts about how people speak and write . If they don't have that ...
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Amsterdam analysis appear approach argues argument associated assume Cambridge causative chapter claim clauses cognitive complex conceptual condition consider constraints constructions context contrast derived discourse discussion distinction effects English event evidence example expressed fact frequency functional given grammar Guaraní head important independent instance interesting interpretation involves issues John John Benjamins Journal language lexical linguistic markers marking meaning morphology nature nominal notes noun object occur Oxford patterns person phonology phrase position possessor possible predicate present pronouns properties proposed provides question reading reference represented result rules semantic sentences similar speakers specific speech structure suffix suggests syntactic syntax tense theory tion topic University Press verb