Language, Band 61George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1985 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 78
Seite 37
... given string is divided in two , the end of the first immediate constituent of that string is marked by a DISJUNCTIVE accent on the last word of that string . The accents are ranked , so that a higher division is marked by a higher ...
... given string is divided in two , the end of the first immediate constituent of that string is marked by a DISJUNCTIVE accent on the last word of that string . The accents are ranked , so that a higher division is marked by a higher ...
Seite 91
... given that missing complements of both English ( as in Napoli 1983a ) and Italian are best handled by phrase structure analyses , one might want to take the tests and insights offered here and examine the phenomenon in other languages ...
... given that missing complements of both English ( as in Napoli 1983a ) and Italian are best handled by phrase structure analyses , one might want to take the tests and insights offered here and examine the phenomenon in other languages ...
Seite 842
... given a book is intransitive ? This sentence certainly requires two arguments ; Mary was given , in the intended reading , is as incomplete as John hit . By the same token , the Japanese sentence Marii wa hon o atae - rare- ta ' Mary was ...
... given a book is intransitive ? This sentence certainly requires two arguments ; Mary was given , in the intended reading , is as incomplete as John hit . By the same token , the Japanese sentence Marii wa hon o atae - rare- ta ' Mary was ...
Inhalt
Current Periodicals Collection | 258 |
VOLUME 61 NUMBER 1 | 322 |
Topic structures in Chinese | 745 |
Urheberrecht | |
1 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accent allow analysis answer appear approach argues argument aspects Chinese claim clause clitics combination communicative complements consider constituent constructions contains context contrast conversational definite dialect direct discourse discussion distinction element English evidence examples explanation expressed fact FIGURE final function further German give given grammar important indicate interesting interpretation involve John language lexical linguistic logical marked meaning names natural negation Note noun object occur operator particles particular passive patterns phonological phrase position possible pragmatic present Press principles problem pronoun proposed provides question reading reason reference relation relative represent rules semantic sentences similar speakers speech stress structure suggests syntactic syntax Table theory topic types University utterance verb words York