Language, Band 74,Ausgaben 1-2Linguistic Society of America, 1998 |
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Seite 49
... object clitic usage . More precisely , Nadasdi ( 1995a ) found that use of a lexical subject favors use of a preverbal object clitic , as in 5a , while use of a subject clitic is favorable to the use of a postverbal strong pronoun , as ...
... object clitic usage . More precisely , Nadasdi ( 1995a ) found that use of a lexical subject favors use of a preverbal object clitic , as in 5a , while use of a subject clitic is favorable to the use of a postverbal strong pronoun , as ...
Seite 63
... object NP of some verbs can — in positive clauses — be marked by either objective11 or partitive case , with a meaning difference . The difference indicates ( i ) totality versus partiality of the involvement of the object , i.e. ' all ...
... object NP of some verbs can — in positive clauses — be marked by either objective11 or partitive case , with a meaning difference . The difference indicates ( i ) totality versus partiality of the involvement of the object , i.e. ' all ...
Seite 316
... object - of - preposition relatives in experiment 1. ( Percentages are based on total relative clause utterances in each age group that contained a preposition construction ( P ) or a genitive construction ( G ) . ) Because in - depth ...
... object - of - preposition relatives in experiment 1. ( Percentages are based on total relative clause utterances in each age group that contained a preposition construction ( P ) or a genitive construction ( G ) . ) Because in - depth ...
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analysis appear approach argues argument aspect authors Cambridge chapter Chinese claim clauses complementizer complex considered construction contains context contrast creole denials dependencies derived dialect dictionary discourse discussion distinction English evidence example expression fact final focus French function German given grammar identificational focus important interesting interpretation irregular issues Japanese John language lexical linguistic marked meaning movement nature notes noun object particular past patterns person phonology pied-piping pitch accent position possible preposition present Press principles problem processing pronouns proposed provides question reading reference regular relation relative restricted resumptive rules semantic sentence shows social speakers specific speech structure suggests syntactic syntax tense theory tion topic types University utterance variation verbs volume vowel writing York