Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 28
Seite 604
WANNA REVISITED RICHARD HUDSON University College London This article addresses general questions about the organization of grammar via a detailed discussion of a small , but well - explored , area of English : the contraction of want ...
WANNA REVISITED RICHARD HUDSON University College London This article addresses general questions about the organization of grammar via a detailed discussion of a small , but well - explored , area of English : the contraction of want ...
Seite 605
THE NONPHONOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF wanna . Most of the properties of wanna are well documented and uncontroversial , so they are simply listed below . ( 6 ) SYNTAX a . For most speakers , want to does not reduce to wanna if want has an ...
THE NONPHONOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF wanna . Most of the properties of wanna are well documented and uncontroversial , so they are simply listed below . ( 6 ) SYNTAX a . For most speakers , want to does not reduce to wanna if want has an ...
Seite 607
( 19 ) I wanna / əl eat . ( 20 ) Wanda / ər / eats . Similarly , many nonrhotic accents in the United Kingdom avoid the usual intrusive r , but use a rounded vowel / m / ( or even a semivowel / w / ) before a vowel instead of the usual ...
( 19 ) I wanna / əl eat . ( 20 ) Wanda / ər / eats . Similarly , many nonrhotic accents in the United Kingdom avoid the usual intrusive r , but use a rounded vowel / m / ( or even a semivowel / w / ) before a vowel instead of the usual ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Inhalt
Letters to Language | 479 |
Problems for the pronominal argument hypothesis | 486 |
A cognitive | 515 |
Urheberrecht | |
12 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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