Language, Band 45,Ausgaben 2-4Linguistic Society of America, 1969 |
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Seite 490
... meaning , e.g. She drank the water vs. She will water the plants , where the contrast in noun and verb usage clearly determines which meaning is to be understood . On the other hand , the marking of meaning may be accomplished by the ...
... meaning , e.g. She drank the water vs. She will water the plants , where the contrast in noun and verb usage clearly determines which meaning is to be understood . On the other hand , the marking of meaning may be accomplished by the ...
Seite 514
... meaning - forms belonged to the same idiolect , and as if the members of sets of irreconcilable meaning - forms each belonged to idiolects which differed only in such members . In general this pro- cedure would imply as many idiolects ...
... meaning - forms belonged to the same idiolect , and as if the members of sets of irreconcilable meaning - forms each belonged to idiolects which differed only in such members . In general this pro- cedure would imply as many idiolects ...
Seite 769
... meaning of will . In his comprehensive work on the English verb system , Joos ( 1964 : 147 ) classifies will and the other English modals as markers of ' relative ( as opposed to factual ) as- sertion ' . The meaning of will in ...
... meaning of will . In his comprehensive work on the English verb system , Joos ( 1964 : 147 ) classifies will and the other English modals as markers of ' relative ( as opposed to factual ) as- sertion ' . The meaning of will in ...
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