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Note , incidentally , that it is not the case that there was a small subset of subjects who consistently confirmed 100 % for most : only one subject ( out of 32 ) consistently confirmed 100 % for most in the three questions pertaining ...
Note , incidentally , that it is not the case that there was a small subset of subjects who consistently confirmed 100 % for most : only one subject ( out of 32 ) consistently confirmed 100 % for most in the three questions pertaining ...
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Consider the question I posed to my subjects based on 49 . ( 49 ) Iddo : Dana solved all the problems . Maya : Most of them . Is Maya's claim true / did Maya tell the truth in case Dana solved all the problems ?
Consider the question I posed to my subjects based on 49 . ( 49 ) Iddo : Dana solved all the problems . Maya : Most of them . Is Maya's claim true / did Maya tell the truth in case Dana solved all the problems ?
Seite 857
In some cases , it is made quite explicit what the required answer is , as in a question at the end of Ch . 6 that asks ' What kind of evidence supports the null auxiliary hypothesis for questions like What John eating ? ' .
In some cases , it is made quite explicit what the required answer is , as in a question at the end of Ch . 6 that asks ' What kind of evidence supports the null auxiliary hypothesis for questions like What John eating ? ' .
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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 alternations 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 indicate inference interaction interpretation 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 Press processing production properties proposed provides question reading reference relation relevant represented requires resultative role rules segments semantic sentences similar speaker specific speech stops structure suggests syntactic syntax Table tense theory tion University variation verb verbal voiced volume vowel