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Seite 31
FUNCTIONS OF CONSTITUENT ORDERING : SPEAKER - ORIENTED VS. LISTENER - ORIENTED ACCOUNTS . Why do speakers choose one constituent ordering over another ? What functions does ordering serve ? Past treatments of this issue have frequently ...
FUNCTIONS OF CONSTITUENT ORDERING : SPEAKER - ORIENTED VS. LISTENER - ORIENTED ACCOUNTS . Why do speakers choose one constituent ordering over another ? What functions does ordering serve ? Past treatments of this issue have frequently ...
Seite 32
A second possible function of end weight is to facilitate planning and production , Speakers construct utterances on the ... Postponing elements that are hard to produce , such as long and complex constituents , gives the speaker more ...
A second possible function of end weight is to facilitate planning and production , Speakers construct utterances on the ... Postponing elements that are hard to produce , such as long and complex constituents , gives the speaker more ...
Seite 46
All of these processes occur extremely rapidly , as social constraints force speakers to contribute to the situation ... Furthermore , complex phrases are normally conceptually more difficult than simpler ones , and the speaker may have ...
All of these processes occur extremely rapidly , as social constraints force speakers to contribute to the situation ... Furthermore , complex phrases are normally conceptually more difficult than simpler ones , and the speaker may have ...
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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