Tracing English Through Time: Explorations in Language Variation : in Honour of Herbert Schendl on the Occasion of His 65th BirthdayUte Smit |
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Page 86
... monolingual German data contain more sharer relations between verbs and predicative adjectives than between auxiliaries / modals and non - finite verbs . Adjectives intervening between objects and their head verbs give rise to the ...
... monolingual German data contain more sharer relations between verbs and predicative adjectives than between auxiliaries / modals and non - finite verbs . Adjectives intervening between objects and their head verbs give rise to the ...
Page 90
... monolingual German dependencies . Table 13 ( Appendix 2 ) , however , shows the distances for mixed grammatical relations ( subjects , adjuncts , pre - dependent shares and post - dependent objects ) are all longer than their monolingual ...
... monolingual German dependencies . Table 13 ( Appendix 2 ) , however , shows the distances for mixed grammatical relations ( subjects , adjuncts , pre - dependent shares and post - dependent objects ) are all longer than their monolingual ...
Page 92
... monolingual English dependencies and mixed dependencies with an English head confirms the hypothesis formulated on the basis of the data presented at the beginning of this section , i.e. that Eng- lish heads preferably enter into rather ...
... monolingual English dependencies and mixed dependencies with an English head confirms the hypothesis formulated on the basis of the data presented at the beginning of this section , i.e. that Eng- lish heads preferably enter into rather ...
Contents
Robert Lowth and the use of the inflectional subjunctive | 1 |
Alexander Gills account of northern speech | 17 |
Is this doable? Tracing the expression | 33 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
adjectives analysis appear Cambridge century clause code-switching cohesive concepts corpus course dependencies derived dialect directions discussion distribution Early Early Modern evidence example expressions fact Figure forms French frequent function German given grammar head historical illustrated indicative inflectional instances interesting Italie knowledge language Languedoc Latin less letters lexical Lincolnshire linguistic London look Lowth's maps meaning medieval Middle English mixed ModE Modern English monolingual northern noted object occur Old English original Oxford particular past patterns period person phrase position possible present Press principle question reference relations relative represent Schendl seems short shows similarity speakers speech structure subjunctive suffix suggest switched syntactic Table texts tion types unit University usage values Vancouver variation varieties verb verbal vowels words