Language, Band 80,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 2004 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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... object pair condition and tested on a switch between [ bi ] and [ di ] , they did look significantly longer during the switch trials . Stager and Werker ( 1997 ) interpret this as indicating that the infants at these two ages were ...
... object pair condition and tested on a switch between [ bi ] and [ di ] , they did look significantly longer during the switch trials . Stager and Werker ( 1997 ) interpret this as indicating that the infants at these two ages were ...
Seite 720
... object position . A weak object of a verb like look for displays a reading parallel to the interpretational pattern for weak subjects of stage - level predicates . A weak object of a verb like hate displays a reading parallel to that ...
... object position . A weak object of a verb like look for displays a reading parallel to the interpretational pattern for weak subjects of stage - level predicates . A weak object of a verb like hate displays a reading parallel to that ...
Seite 732
... object ( the paper has the property written in 68 ) . In each of these three cases ( subjects of stage- and individual- level adjectives and objects of AIVs ) , two complementary interpretational patterns for the relevant NP correlate ...
... object ( the paper has the property written in 68 ) . In each of these three cases ( subjects of stage- and individual- level adjectives and objects of AIVs ) , two complementary interpretational patterns for the relevant NP correlate ...
Inhalt
Letters to Language | 377 |
The perceptual acquisition of phonological | 384 |
Semantics and pragmatics of English verbal dependent coordination Neal Whitman | 403 |
Urheberrecht | |
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agreement analysis appear approach argues argument Cambridge chapter claim communication complement consider consonants constraints construction context contrast coordinations correspondence Creole definite determiners direct discourse discussion distinction effect English event evidence example expressions fact function further given grammar historical implicature inference interaction interpretation introduction involve issues John language lexical linguistic majority marking meaning morphology names nasal natural nominal Note noun object observed occur Oxford particular patterns person phonology phrases position possible pragmatic predicate present processing production properties proposed provides question reading reference relation relevant requires resultative role rules segments semantic sentences similar speaker specific speech stops structure suggests syntactic syntax Table tense theory tion University University Press variation verb verbal voiced volume vowel