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Seite 96
In general , penult stress on vowel - final words is the norm ( e.g. tiéne ' s / he has ' ) , while consonant - final words with final stress are considered regular ( e.g. mantél ' table cloth ' ) . Antepenult stress is always regarded ...
In general , penult stress on vowel - final words is the norm ( e.g. tiéne ' s / he has ' ) , while consonant - final words with final stress are considered regular ( e.g. mantél ' table cloth ' ) . Antepenult stress is always regarded ...
Seite 386
The structural description has the obvious advantage of being precise but a structural position alone is not always sufficient to unequivocally identify the topic , because the topic is usually considered a derived element with no ...
The structural description has the obvious advantage of being precise but a structural position alone is not always sufficient to unequivocally identify the topic , because the topic is usually considered a derived element with no ...
Seite 456
... specialization in IE linguistics is Celtic — not one of Sz's primary areas — I noticed an uncomfortable number of assertions made or opinions reported that can hardly be considered mainstream today , e.g. that the IE syllabic nasals ...
... specialization in IE linguistics is Celtic — not one of Sz's primary areas — I noticed an uncomfortable number of assertions made or opinions reported that can hardly be considered mainstream today , e.g. that the IE syllabic nasals ...
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acquisition addition analysis appear apply approach argues argument assigned borrowings Cambridge chapter Chinese claim clause communication condition considered constituent constraints constructions contains context contrast course default defined definition dialects discourse discussion effect English evidence example experiment explain expressions fact FIGURE final French function give given grammar important initial interaction interest interpretation introduced issues John language learning lexical linguistic linking marked meaning nasal vowels natural Note object parameters particular phonology phrase position possible pragmatic predicate present Press principles problem pronoun properties proposed provides question reading reference relation relative represented require role rules selection semantic sense sentence situation speakers specific speech stress structure suggests syntactic syntax thematic theory tion topic University verb volume