Language, Band 55George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1979 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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Seite 95
... tense or aspect , the ergative marking is ALWAYS found either in past tense or in perfect aspect . Burushaski , a language isolate spoken in inaccessible mountain valleys of the Karakoram Range , on the border between Kashmir and Tibet ...
... tense or aspect , the ergative marking is ALWAYS found either in past tense or in perfect aspect . Burushaski , a language isolate spoken in inaccessible mountain valleys of the Karakoram Range , on the border between Kashmir and Tibet ...
Seite 169
... tense , the narrator relives these events , or causes his audience to relive them ( or both ) . The point is that the use of the present tense somehow makes it seem that the events themselves are taking place at the moment of speaking ...
... tense , the narrator relives these events , or causes his audience to relive them ( or both ) . The point is that the use of the present tense somehow makes it seem that the events themselves are taking place at the moment of speaking ...
Seite 172
... tense . In addition , CHP contrasts with other uses of HP in narrative by virtue of being used in all cases where substitution for the past tense might occur . Together the two properties indeed might be taken as a defining feature of ...
... tense . In addition , CHP contrasts with other uses of HP in narrative by virtue of being used in all cases where substitution for the past tense might occur . Together the two properties indeed might be taken as a defining feature of ...
Inhalt
language development | 765 |
Talking to children | 981 |
Grammatical theory in western Europe 15001700 | 987 |
Urheberrecht | |
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alternation analysis appears apply approach aspect assigned basic causative century Chapter claim clause communication considered consonant constraints constructions contains contrast derived dialect discussion distinction English ergative evidence examples explanation expression fact final function further give given grammar historical important indicates initial interesting interpretation involve John language Latin least lexical linguistic logical marking meaning morphological nature nominative Note noun NP's object occur particular patterns person phonetic phonological position possible predictions prepositions present Press problems pronouns properties proposed question reference relative represented restricting result rules seems semantic sentence sequence Spanish speakers speech strategy stress structure suffix suggests surface syllable syntactic syntax tense theory tone transitive underlying University variation verb vowel word order