Language, Band 82George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 2006 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 84
Seite 610
... explain why wanna cannot take an overt object as well as a bare infinitive , as in 32 , parallel with let in 33. This is strange because the synony- mous want does allow an object , as in 34 . ( 32 ) * I wanna him go . ( 33 ) I let him ...
... explain why wanna cannot take an overt object as well as a bare infinitive , as in 32 , parallel with let in 33. This is strange because the synony- mous want does allow an object , as in 34 . ( 32 ) * I wanna him go . ( 33 ) I let him ...
Seite 614
... explain if morphs exist on a different level from syntax , as in the three - level analysis , because this increases the ' distance ' between syntactic and morphological categories . The distance concerned can be modeled in network ...
... explain if morphs exist on a different level from syntax , as in the three - level analysis , because this increases the ' distance ' between syntactic and morphological categories . The distance concerned can be modeled in network ...
Seite 622
... explained better in the context of a full analysis of English phonology in which this alternation followed from more ... explain why / ǝ / at the end of wanna either does , or does not , alternate in the same way as to . Two parts of ...
... explained better in the context of a full analysis of English phonology in which this alternation followed from more ... explain why / ǝ / at the end of wanna either does , or does not , alternate in the same way as to . Two parts of ...
Inhalt
Letters to Language | 479 |
Problems for the pronominal argument hypothesis | 486 |
A cognitive | 515 |
Urheberrecht | |
13 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquisition adjective adjuncts affixes analysis anaphora approach argues argument Austronesian c-command chapter clitics closure voicing cognitive Cognitive Linguistics complement conjunct consonants constraints construction grammar context contrast cues devoicing dialects discontinuous NPs discourse discussion distinction duration effect English evidence example expression fact factives FLDH function Giannakidou grammar HPSG hypothesis ideophones implicature INDEX infinitival inflection interaction ISBN island Japanese John Benjamins language families lexeme lexical licensing linguistic loanwords Maliseet Maliseet-Passamaquoddy markedness meaning morphemes morphology negative Neolithic nonveridical noun obstruent Oxford parasitic gaps patterns perceptibility phonetic phonology phrasal phrase plural position pragmatic prediction presented processing pronoun proposed provides reference relative clause representation resultative constructions role secondary object segments semantic sentence singletons singular speakers speech stimuli structure suffix syntactic syntax theory tion verb veridical voiced geminates voiceless voiceless consonants vowel wanna word order