Language, Band 62,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1986 |
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... object , and if so , whether the object is individu- ated . The claim is that , although these semantic parameters can indepen- dently vary ( thus , in English , one can make a sentence either affirmative or negative , and each choice ...
... object , and if so , whether the object is individu- ated . The claim is that , although these semantic parameters can indepen- dently vary ( thus , in English , one can make a sentence either affirmative or negative , and each choice ...
Seite 428
... objects may remain unindividuated is that they may not be sufficiently distinguished from the generic object implied in the meaning of every transitive verb ; this is the point of AUSTIN'S paper . Using data from a number of ergative ...
... objects may remain unindividuated is that they may not be sufficiently distinguished from the generic object implied in the meaning of every transitive verb ; this is the point of AUSTIN'S paper . Using data from a number of ergative ...
Seite 438
... Object - types higher on this hierarchy tend to : ( i ) grammaticalize first in a language , before lower objects ; ( ii ) grammaticalize obligatorily , before lower objects ; ( iii ) appear more frequently as DO in natural discourse ...
... Object - types higher on this hierarchy tend to : ( i ) grammaticalize first in a language , before lower objects ; ( ii ) grammaticalize obligatorily , before lower objects ; ( iii ) appear more frequently as DO in natural discourse ...
Inhalt
Abschnitt 1 | 13 |
Abschnitt 2 | 15 |
Abschnitt 3 | 19 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abkhaz actants affixes African American analysis antecedent apply argues argument associated autosegmental autosegmental phonology basilectal Bhojpuri Caribbean Chomsky clause cliticization cognitive coindexing constituent constructions context contrast creole decreolization dependent-marked dependent-marking languages derived dialects discourse discussion downstep endocentric English evidence examples fact factors forms function geminates German grammar guage H-tones habitual head-marking languages hypothesis Inalterability incorporation interpretation Irish John language language death lexical linguistic features Linking Constraint markedness markers marking meaning melody mesolectal morphemes morphological native nominal noun NWBE object paper phonetic phonology phrases pidgin predicate present principle problems pronouns R-structure reference relations representation represented rule sample scores segments semantic sentences Shona situation social sociolinguistic speakers speech structure subordination suffixes syntactic syntax tense text types thematic roles THEME theoretical theory tier tonal tones topics University Press verb verbal vowels word order