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METALINGUISTIC NEGATION AND PRAGMATIC AMBIGUITY LAURENCE R. HORN Yale University When ' marked ' or ' external ' negation has not been treated as an additional semantic operator alongside the straightforward truth - functional ...
METALINGUISTIC NEGATION AND PRAGMATIC AMBIGUITY LAURENCE R. HORN Yale University When ' marked ' or ' external ' negation has not been treated as an additional semantic operator alongside the straightforward truth - functional ...
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Thus , according to Lehmann 1974 , Proto - Indo - European was an SOV language , and therefore could not have R [ elative ) C [ lause ] s marked by R [ elative ) P [ ronoun ) s , in spite of the actual data for such structures .
Thus , according to Lehmann 1974 , Proto - Indo - European was an SOV language , and therefore could not have R [ elative ) C [ lause ] s marked by R [ elative ) P [ ronoun ) s , in spite of the actual data for such structures .
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N marked by dem . def . N with restr . mod . def . N alone name TOTAL VO SCORE MEAN 1 N 2N TOTAL 34 3 37 1.08 82 2 84 1.02 265 60 325 1.18 176 3 179 1.02 232 13 245 1.05 789 81 870 1.09 TABLE 8. Written text .
N marked by dem . def . N with restr . mod . def . N alone name TOTAL VO SCORE MEAN 1 N 2N TOTAL 34 3 37 1.08 82 2 84 1.02 265 60 325 1.18 176 3 179 1.02 232 13 245 1.05 789 81 870 1.09 TABLE 8. Written text .
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Inhalt
Orthography and linguistic theory | 28 |
Complementation in Italian | 73 |
The independence of syntax and phonology in cliticization Judith L Klavans | 95 |
Urheberrecht | |
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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 exist expressed fact FIGURE final function further German give given grammar important indicate interesting interpretation involve issues John language lexical linguistic logical major 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 require rules semantic sentences similar speakers speech stress structure suggests syntactic syntax Table theory topic types University verb words York