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any two nouns can be concatenated on the basis of just any underlying relationship ; e.g. , war man cannot mean ' man who hates war ' , or house tree ' tree between two houses ' ( Zimmer 1971 : C8-9 ) . Scholars working within a ...
any two nouns can be concatenated on the basis of just any underlying relationship ; e.g. , war man cannot mean ' man who hates war ' , or house tree ' tree between two houses ' ( Zimmer 1971 : C8-9 ) . Scholars working within a ...
Seite 812
approach , Lees proposes ( 1970 : 182 ) that members of a limited class of ' generalized verbs ' appear in the underlying structure of compounds : “ By " generalized verb ” I mean just the minimal set of semantic features which ...
approach , Lees proposes ( 1970 : 182 ) that members of a limited class of ' generalized verbs ' appear in the underlying structure of compounds : “ By " generalized verb ” I mean just the minimal set of semantic features which ...
Seite 814
A number of the compounds Levi analyses as results of the deletion process would appear to fit equally well her criterion for those derived by nominalization ; the underlying predicate survives overtly in the head noun , e.g. viral ...
A number of the compounds Levi analyses as results of the deletion process would appear to fit equally well her criterion for those derived by nominalization ; the underlying predicate survives overtly in the head noun , e.g. viral ...
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Inhalt
Language change and poetic options D Gary Miller | 21 |
Where does Latin sum come from? Martti A Nyman | 39 |
Referentiality in Spanish noun phrases Nelson Rojas | 61 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acceptable analysis appears apply argues arguments associated assume assumption believe called Chapter claim classifier clause clear complementizer complex concerned consider constituents constraints constructions contains definite deletion derived determine discussion distinction English evidence example existence explanation expression fact FIGURE final function give given grammar historical important indicative initial interesting interpretation involved John kind language least lexical linguistic Mary meaning natural notion noun object occur particular passive phonological phrases position possible predict present Press principle probability problem proposed question Raising reading reason reference relations relative respect result rules seems semantic sense sentences significance similar single speakers specific speech stress structure suggests surface syntactic syntax theory tion transformations underlying University verbs vowels York