Language, Band 80George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 2004 |
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... fact that English is much more closely related to German than French is . The fact that English and German are much more closely related than the other languages is simply irrelevant to the cognate status of these forms . Instead of ...
... fact that English is much more closely related to German than French is . The fact that English and German are much more closely related than the other languages is simply irrelevant to the cognate status of these forms . Instead of ...
Seite 595
... facts , propositions , events , or specified events as arguments . ( speech act ) ( 1 ) a . Frankly , [ why would he do such a thing ] ? b . Unfortunately , [ she lay down on a scorpion's nest ] . ( fact ) c . Sam probably [ has made an ...
... facts , propositions , events , or specified events as arguments . ( speech act ) ( 1 ) a . Frankly , [ why would he do such a thing ] ? b . Unfortunately , [ she lay down on a scorpion's nest ] . ( fact ) c . Sam probably [ has made an ...
Seite 680
... fact that speakers using most do not commonly generate a scalar GCI does not rule out the possibility that speakers of some or many do generate ' all ' - excluding GCIs frequently enough to justify the accepted neo- Gricean analysis for ...
... fact that speakers using most do not commonly generate a scalar GCI does not rule out the possibility that speakers of some or many do generate ' all ' - excluding GCIs frequently enough to justify the accepted neo- Gricean analysis for ...
Inhalt
Letters to Language | 1 |
Crosslinguistic perspectives Ulrike Zeshan | 7 |
Subjects and interface delay in child Spanish and Catalan John Grinstead | 40 |
Urheberrecht | |
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agreement alternations Amsterdam analysis appear approach argues argument Cambridge chapter common comparative consider consonants constraints construction context contrast coordination correspondence definite dependency determined discourse discussion distinction effect English evidence example exceptions experiment expressions fact factors final function given grammar historical important infants interesting interpretation involving issues John John Benjamins Journal lexical linguistic marked meaning metathesis morphology names nasal nature noun object observed occur Oxford pairs particle particular patterns phonetic phonological phrases position possible pragmatic prediction present principle processing properties proposed question reference relation relevant requires role segments semantic sentence signed languages similar sound speakers specific speech stops stress structure suggests syntactic syntax Table theory tion topic types University University Press verb voiced vowel