Language, Band 80,Ausgaben 3-4Linguistic 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. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 64
Seite 811
... rule , this apparent ' borrowing ' can be incorporated directly in the analysis . First , one can assume two general rules that apply to all second declension nouns : the nominative singular ending is -us ( la ) , and the accusative ...
... rule , this apparent ' borrowing ' can be incorporated directly in the analysis . First , one can assume two general rules that apply to all second declension nouns : the nominative singular ending is -us ( la ) , and the accusative ...
Seite 813
... rules . There are two rules of referral , shown in 3. By default , the accusative takes the form of the nominative ( 3a ) . With animate o - stems , and everywhere in the plural , animate accusatives take the form of the genitive ( 3b ) ...
... rules . There are two rules of referral , shown in 3. By default , the accusative takes the form of the nominative ( 3a ) . With animate o - stems , and everywhere in the plural , animate accusatives take the form of the genitive ( 3b ) ...
Seite 819
... rules are sufficient to generate the surface effect of directionality , thus making directional rules unnecessary . We have seen , however , that the rejection of directional rules brings real consequences in the range of facts that can ...
... rules are sufficient to generate the surface effect of directionality , thus making directional rules unnecessary . We have seen , however , that the rejection of directional rules brings real consequences in the range of facts that can ...
Inhalt
Letters to Language | 377 |
The perceptual acquisition of phonological | 384 |
Semantics and pragmatics of English verbal dependent coordination Neal Whitman | 403 |
Urheberrecht | |
3 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acquisition adverbial phrases analysis approach argues argument Aymara bilingual Cambridge chapter clause clitics cognitive complement consonants constraints constructional subevent context contrast conversational implicature coordinations corpus Corpus linguistics Creole definite discourse discourse analysis discussion distinction effect encoded English example feature function functor grammar homorganic individual-level inference inflectional intensional interaction interpretation involve ISBN John Benjamins Kikongo language language attrition language contact LDCA Linguistic Society markedness morphology names nasal agreement Ngbaka nominal noun phrases object obstruents Oxford papers patterns phonetic phonology place of articulation plural position pragmatic predicate prenasal stops pronouns properties proposed prosodic reading reference relation relevant resultative role segments semantic sentences similar sociolinguistic sorcerers speaker specific speech stage-level stops structure suffix syncretism syntactic syntax tense theory tion University Press upper bound variation verb verbal subevent vocative voiced vowel Werker words