Language, Band 52,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1976 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 38
Seite 662
... texts , collected in the Sepik area during the 1930's . They constitute a small minority of all the relatives observable in Hall's texts ; but they demonstrate the same structure exhibited by the sentences we have been analysing , in ...
... texts , collected in the Sepik area during the 1930's . They constitute a small minority of all the relatives observable in Hall's texts ; but they demonstrate the same structure exhibited by the sentences we have been analysing , in ...
Seite 715
... texts are printed ( though more are known , cf. Ševčenko 1966 ) so the diligent reader can find some definitions with a minimum of effort . In the latter , however , even the identification of the Greek texts discovered by earlier ...
... texts are printed ( though more are known , cf. Ševčenko 1966 ) so the diligent reader can find some definitions with a minimum of effort . In the latter , however , even the identification of the Greek texts discovered by earlier ...
Seite 797
... texts this could be indicated by a final -n or -m ; but most often , the more con- venient til , a simple wavy line above the nasalized vowel , was used by the scribes in their handwritten texts . Given the poor state of conservation of ...
... texts this could be indicated by a final -n or -m ; but most often , the more con- venient til , a simple wavy line above the nasalized vowel , was used by the scribes in their handwritten texts . Given the poor state of conservation of ...
Inhalt
Conjunction Reduction Gapping and RightNode Raising Richard A Hudson | 535 |
The interface of theory and description Peter Cole | 563 |
Which that Herbert F W Stahlke | 584 |
Urheberrecht | |
15 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abstract acceptable allow analysis appear apply argument assumed claim comparatives complement complete conjunct consider constituent constraint construction contains coördination correct deletion derivation dialects direct discussion embedded English evidence examples explain expression fact final formal function give given grammar identification important indicative intelligent involved John language linguistic Maria marked Mary meaning Michigan natural Note noun object occur original particular passive person phonological position possible preposition present Press problem pronoun proposal question raising reason reduction reference relative clauses relativization represented restricted result Review rule seems semantic sentences similar situation speakers specific speech structure subjunctive suggests surface syntactic syntax texts theory tion transformational underlying University verb York