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Hill looks at ethnohistorical , archaeological , ethnographic , and linguistic evidence and concludes that Bellwood's hypothesis is plausible , if unconfirmed . As mentioned above , Campbell ( Ch . 5 ) defends the received view , which ...
Hill looks at ethnohistorical , archaeological , ethnographic , and linguistic evidence and concludes that Bellwood's hypothesis is plausible , if unconfirmed . As mentioned above , Campbell ( Ch . 5 ) defends the received view , which ...
Seite 714
I discuss a series of cases in which there is evidence that lexically particular instances of constructions or word sequences are stored in memory and accessed as a unit . I further discuss facts that show that the frequency of use of ...
I discuss a series of cases in which there is evidence that lexically particular instances of constructions or word sequences are stored in memory and accessed as a unit . I further discuss facts that show that the frequency of use of ...
Seite 889
C does indeed find evidence for 2 , and much of it is worth noting . Despite its originality , 2 does share certain features with claims that have already been made in the literature . The structure in 2 represents the conjunction as a ...
C does indeed find evidence for 2 , and much of it is worth noting . Despite its originality , 2 does share certain features with claims that have already been made in the literature . The structure in 2 represents the conjunction as a ...
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Inhalt
Letters to Language | 479 |
Problems for the pronominal argument hypothesis | 486 |
A cognitive | 515 |
Urheberrecht | |
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adjective allow analysis appear approach argues argument Cambridge chapter clause cognitive complex conjunct consonants constraints construction contains context contrast conversation coordination dependency derived devoicing discourse discussion distinction distribution effect English evidence example experiment explain expression fact factives Figure function geminates given grammar IDENT important INDEX indicates inflection interaction interesting introduction island issues Japanese John language lexical licensing linguistic meaning natural negative noted noun object occur particular patterns perceptibility phonetic phonology phrase plural politeness position possible prediction present Press properties proposed provides question reading reference relative representation represented role rule semantic sentence singletons speakers specific speech structure suggest syntactic syntax takes texts theory tion turn University verb voiced volume vowel wanna