Language, Band 61,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1985 |
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George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch. with a preceding 3rd person accusative clitic , rarely with a 3rd person dative one - but never with a 1st or 2nd person clitic object , or with a following object ( whether clitic or NP ) ...
George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch. with a preceding 3rd person accusative clitic , rarely with a 3rd person dative one - but never with a 1st or 2nd person clitic object , or with a following object ( whether clitic or NP ) ...
Seite 808
... clitic subjects ; this excludes 76b- c when il is used . ( b ) Impersonal subjects are necessarily clitic ; this explains why the subject cannot be replaced by a NP pronoun in 76b - c ( as it can in 76a ) : Celles - ci ayant été ...
... clitic subjects ; this excludes 76b- c when il is used . ( b ) Impersonal subjects are necessarily clitic ; this explains why the subject cannot be replaced by a NP pronoun in 76b - c ( as it can in 76a ) : Celles - ci ayant été ...
Seite 816
... clitic voi in Walloon , whose status is still vague . If it were an impersonal ( clitic ) subject , as its syntactic distribution suggests , one could hy- pothesize a relation between the absence of overt subject in voici / voilà and ...
... clitic voi in Walloon , whose status is still vague . If it were an impersonal ( clitic ) subject , as its syntactic distribution suggests , one could hy- pothesize a relation between the absence of overt subject in voici / voilà and ...
Inhalt
JOURNAL OF THE LINGUISTIC | 521 |
A reply | 569 |
The syntax of fi complements in Caribbean English Creole Donald Winford | 588 |
Urheberrecht | |
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agent allow analysis answer appear approach argue argument auxiliary claim clauses clitic combination complements complex conditional considered constituent constructions contains conversational defined dependencies derived dialects discourse discussion distinction distribution English evidence examples explanation expressions fact FIGURE formal French function further German give given grammar important indicative interesting interpretation involve issues John language lexical linguistic marked meaning modal natural Note object occur particular passive person phrase position possible preposition present Press principles problem properties proposed provides question reading reference relative represented require response restricted rules seems semantic sentences similar simple speakers speech structure suggests syntactic syntax tense theory topics types University verbs voeren voici/voilà voilà volume York