Language, Band 45,Ausgaben 2-4Linguistic Society of America, 1969 |
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... language can be regarded as the last stage of a time - continuous language immediately preceding the appearance of daughter languages . Such a proto - language is called a DISINTEGRANT PROTO - LANGUAGE ( DPL ) . The disinte- grant proto ...
... language can be regarded as the last stage of a time - continuous language immediately preceding the appearance of daughter languages . Such a proto - language is called a DISINTEGRANT PROTO - LANGUAGE ( DPL ) . The disinte- grant proto ...
Seite 634
... language universal ' . Are these universals a matter of known languages , or of possible languages ? Dik regards a language universal as an inductive generalization from a given corpus of known languages , not as an empirical assumption ...
... language universal ' . Are these universals a matter of known languages , or of possible languages ? Dik regards a language universal as an inductive generalization from a given corpus of known languages , not as an empirical assumption ...
Seite 635
... language separately ' . This would only be true if there were no two different languages to which the same definition of ' the word ' could be applied , i.e. , if there were no general category ' word ' at all . As a matter of fact ...
... language separately ' . This would only be true if there were no two different languages to which the same definition of ' the word ' could be applied , i.e. , if there were no general category ' word ' at all . As a matter of fact ...
Inhalt
PreGermanic p for IndoEuropean k | 243 |
Onomatopoetics in the Indian linguistic area | 274 |
Markedness in stratificational phonology | 300 |
Urheberrecht | |
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alternation analysis appear apply Arabic chapter child clause common comparative completely considered consonant construction contains contrast convention corresponding course defined deletion derived described dialects discussion distinction distribution effect elements English evidence example expression fact Figure formal forms function further give given grammar important indicate instance interesting interpretation involved John language latter least linguistic logical Loglan marked meaning natural noted noun occur original past pattern phonemic phonological phrase position possible preceding present problem question reason reference relative represented respect result Romany rule seems segments semantic sense sentence single social sound speakers specified speech stems stress structure suggests syllable Table tense theory tion tone transformational translation underlying University utterances verb vowel