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. |
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Seite 50
... PHRASE ( e.g. I said or he exclaimed ) . The Eng . punctuation system treats the direct discourse as subordinate to the introductory phrase , no matter where the introductory phrase stands with respect to the quoted discourse : ( 8 ) ...
... PHRASE ( e.g. I said or he exclaimed ) . The Eng . punctuation system treats the direct discourse as subordinate to the introductory phrase , no matter where the introductory phrase stands with respect to the quoted discourse : ( 8 ) ...
Seite 53
... phrase structure rules on the basis of a single principle ; the same is true of Harris ' system of phrase structure , as Chomsky himself notes . We may therefore ask at this point whether the Masoretic analysis operated in terms of such ...
... phrase structure rules on the basis of a single principle ; the same is true of Harris ' system of phrase structure , as Chomsky himself notes . We may therefore ask at this point whether the Masoretic analysis operated in terms of such ...
Seite 286
... phrases : the domain within which a prosodic feature is distributed can be either the phonological word or the phonological phrase ( or some other prosodic unit , like the syllable ) . Consequently , if an element counts as belonging to ...
... phrases : the domain within which a prosodic feature is distributed can be either the phonological word or the phonological phrase ( or some other prosodic unit , like the syllable ) . Consequently , if an element counts as belonging to ...
Inhalt
Current Periodicals Collection | 258 |
VOLUME 61 NUMBER 1 | 322 |
Topic structures in Chinese | 745 |
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 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