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Hits 261 – 273 of 273

261
Secondary contractions in West Yorkshire negatives
In: Sociolinguistic patterns in British English. - London : Arnold (1978), 91-100
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262
A note on synalepha and stress maxima
In: Poetics. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 4 (1975) 16, 401-410
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263
SOME PHYSIOLOGICAL PARAMETERS FOR PROSODIC DESCRIPTION
In: DTIC AND NTIS (1968)
BASE
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264
Zur Vokalkontraktion im ionisch-attischen Dialekt
Eulenburg, Kurt. - Straßburg : Trübner, 1903
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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265
Iterated Belief Change and the Levi Identity
In: http://drops.dagstuhl.de/opus/volltexte/2005/331/pdf/05321.NayakAbhaya.Paper.331.pdf
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266
Iterated Belief Contraction from First Principles ∗
In: http://www.ijcai.org/papers07/Papers/IJCAI07-413.pdf
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267
Exploring the Mechanism of Tonal Contraction in Taiwan Mandarin
In: http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/yi/yispapers/Cheng_Xu_Gubian_Interspeech2010.pdf
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268
and
In: http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/yi/yispapers/Cheng_Xu_LangSpeech2014_author.pdf
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269
Contraction and Backgrounding in Taiwan Mandarin*
In: http://homepage.ntu.edu.tw/~karchung/pubs/Contractions_Chung.pdf
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270
36817. WH CONSTRUCTIONS AND GRAMMATICAL FUNCTIONS Prof. Y. N. Falk Wanna Contraction, p. 1
In: http://pluto.mscc.huji.ac.il/%7Emsyfalk/Wh/Wanna.pdf
Abstract: The sentence (1a) is usually pronounced as (1b) by speakers of English: (1) a. I want to read. b. I wanna read. (more precisely, wanna = [wa+nc] or [wa+÷˜c]) Similarly, questioning (2a) as (2b) is usually pronounced as (2c): (2) a. I want to read The Minimalist Program. b. What do you want to read? c. What do you wanna read? However, questioning (3a) as (3b) cannot (for most speakers of English) be pronounced as (3c). (3) a. I want my students to read The Minimalist Program. b. Who do you want to read The Minimalist Program? c. *Who do you wanna read The Minimalist Program? These facts were noted, in a slightly more complex way, by Lakoff (1970). Lakoff’s observation dealt with the sentences: (4) a. Teddy is the man I want to succeed. b. Teddy is the man I wanna succeed. Lakoff observed that (4a) is ambiguous (‘I want Teddy to succeed ’ vs. ‘I want to succeed Teddy’) while (4b) is unambiguous (only ‘I want to succeed Teddy’). Lakoff’s proposed analysis involved what were referred to as “global rules”, rules that can examine the entire transformational derivation; something to the effect of “contract want to to wanna if there was never anything intervening between want and to.” After empty categories were introduced into the arsenal of transformational grammar (specifically as “traces ” of moved wh elements) it was observed that they could be called upon to account for the wanna facts. (5) a. I want to read. b. What do you want to read e? c. Who do you want e to read The Minimalist Program?
Keyword: to. If the empty category “trace ” blocks wanna contraction; why doesn’t the empty category “PRO”? Similar contractions occur with other verbs. These ot
URL: http://pluto.mscc.huji.ac.il/%7Emsyfalk/Wh/Wanna.pdf
http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.188.7708
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271
The interpersonal dynamics of call-centre interactions: Co-constructing the rise and fall of emotion Forthcoming in Discourse and Communication
In: http://www.engl.polyu.edu.hk/call_centre/document/CCCR_Paper01.pdf
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272
A voltas coas contraccións : cun e con un ; Concerning contractions : cun and con un
Xove Ferreiro, Xosé. - : Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
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273
lemon-UBY Wiktionary English
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