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Showing 1 to 15 of 156 results Save | Export
Hatfield, Adam – ProQuest LLC, 2016
This is a grammar which provides a detailed linguistic description of the phonology, morphology, syntax, discourse, lexicon and cultural environment of the Mehek language and its speakers. Mehek is a language spoken in Papua New Guinea by approximately 6300 people. It belongs to the Sepik language family, Tama branch. The theoretical background…
Descriptors: Grammar, Phonology, Morphology (Languages), Syntax
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Lomashvili, Leila – Advances in Language and Literary Studies, 2015
The paper examines the preverbal markers in Mengrelian as the possible loci of post-syntactic phonological rules that affect the allomorphy of these preverbs. The goal of the paper is to pinpoint the series of these rules and the extent to which the final form of the derived material changes as a result of their application. The phonological rules…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Phonology, Linguistic Theory, Language Research
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Velasco, Daniel Garcia; Hengeveld, Kees; Mackenzie, J. Lachlan – Language Sciences, 2012
This epilogue addresses the most important topics and challenges for the Morphosyntactic Level in Functional Discourse Grammar that have been raised in the articles in this Special Issue. We begin by exploring the differences between the Morphosyntactic Level in FDG and the treatment of morphosyntactic phenomena in other linguistic frameworks. We…
Descriptors: Language Processing, Linguistic Theory, Grammar, Uncommonly Taught Languages
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Hualde, Jose Ignacio – Language Sciences, 2009
In this paper, I examine the prosodic nature of unstressed function words in Spanish. I defend the hypothesis that these words, like all other words in the language, have a syllable that is lexically designated as stressed. I suggest that the essential property of these words is that they are subject to a rule of prosodic merger with following…
Descriptors: Morphemes, Phonology, Spanish, Syllables
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Gavarro, Anna; Martinez-Ferreiro, Silvia – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2007
We examine the inflectional productions of seven Catalan, seven Galician, and seven Spanish speaking agrammatic subjects in an elicitation and a sentence repetition task and consider them in the light of the Tree Pruning Hypothesis (TPH). The results show relatively spared subject person/number agreement with the verb and impaired tense marking…
Descriptors: Grammar, Form Classes (Languages), Morphemes, Spanish Speaking
Kakouriotis, A. – IRAL, 1990
Examines the semantic and syntactic structure of some compound words in modern Greek within the framework of valency theory. It is observed that there is a structural parallel between certain compounds and clauses that contain a clitic object but no subject, as the latter is mapped onto the verb's inflectional ending. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Greek, Linguistic Theory, Semantics, Syntax
Dubinsky, Stanley – 1989
Analysis of Japanese numeral expressions provides evidence that their two semantically distinct functions, attributive and partitive, can be associated with distinct syntactic positions within the noun phrase (NP). The attributive numeral phrase occupies the position of a modifier and is a complement to N or N'. The quantifier (partitive) numeral…
Descriptors: Grammar, Japanese, Linguistic Theory, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
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Salone, Sukari – Journal of the African Language Teachers Association, 2000
Assumes the overall frame work of Extended Standard Theory of grammar, with a focus on the lexicon. It assumes Chomsky's theory that the projection of a verb and its arguments onto syntax is determined by its lexical specifications. Emphasizes a lexical approach to Swahili verbal suffixes. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: African Languages, Linguistic Theory, Suffixes, Swahili
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Markantonatou, Stella – Journal of Linguistics, 1995
This paper argues, utilizing Lexical Mapping Theory (LMT), that there are modern Greek deverbal nominal predicates that take syntactic arguments. A small set of simple unification-based operations is employed to model the relation between the argument structure of verb predicates and that of the corresponding deverbal nominals with an…
Descriptors: Greek, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Nouns
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Hiroyuki, Ura – Journal of East Asian Linguistics, 1999
Elucidates the syntactic properties of the dative-subject constructions that occur in Japanese and Korean. Gives a consistent account, with the aid of the Agr-less checking theory, of their syntactic properties. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Japanese, Korean, Linguistic Theory, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
Wright, Pamela S. – 1995
This paper examines several previously-unexplained aspects of verbal morphology and syntax in Madija, an Arauan languages spoken in Peru and Brazil. These include the distribution of an auxiliary verb that occurs with some predicates but not with others and the factors that determine the choice among three different affixes marking third person…
Descriptors: Affixes, Foreign Countries, Linguistic Theory, Morphemes
Powers, Joyce – 1987
An examination focuses on several instances in which consonant mutation, whereby the initial consonant of a word or constituent undergoes morphophonological changes, occurs in standard literary Welsh. The syntactic and morphological means by which these mutations take place are considered, with emphasis on how an account of these mutations fits…
Descriptors: Consonants, Linguistic Theory, Morphophonemics, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
Langendoen, D. Terence; McDaniel, Dana S. – 1987
A discussion of Leonard Bloomfield's theory on grammatical agreement examines agreement within Bloomfield's overall scheme of syntactic analysis and relates it to current work in syntax. Bloomfield's three types of agreement (concord, government, and cross-reference) are outlined and compared to the contemporary distinction between pro-drop and…
Descriptors: Classification, Comparative Analysis, Grammar, Linguistic Theory
Li, Jen-i Jelina – Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 1995
This paper studies the semantic properties of a reciprocal construction in Taiwanese. Specific focus is on the real-world situations that this reciprocal construction may encode. First, the syntactic properties of the reciprocal construction "xiou"-V in Taiwanese, which are different from these in English, are analyzed. Next, various…
Descriptors: Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Semantics, Structural Analysis (Linguistics)
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Saito, Mamoru – Journal of East Asian Linguistics, 1992
The nature of scrambling in Japanese is examined in light of the work of Webelhuth and Mahajan, and it is argued that their apparently inconsistent hypotheses are both necessary for the analysis of scrambling. A modified version is suggested. (59 references) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Contrastive Linguistics, Grammar, Japanese, Language Research
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