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  • ...rer to supply specific information about [[participant]]s or [[setting]]s. Content questions contrast primarily with [[polar questions]], which just ask for a *[[question-word question]]
    438 bytes (55 words) - 16:35, 27 June 2014
  • ...d by a morphological rule. Intuitively, the Adjacency Condition prevents a word formation rule from looking into the entire derivational history of morphol ...e situation is crucially different in the second example. In this form the content of the [[verb]] ''klimmen'' is not structurally adjacent to the [[suffix]]
    2 KB (315 words) - 15:17, 22 January 2008
  • *[[content question]], [[question-word question]], [[wh-question]]
    921 bytes (108 words) - 15:59, 2 September 2008
  • '''Wh-question''' is another term for [[content question]]. In a language with overt [[wh-movement|''wh''-movement]], a que ...been common only since the 1960s. It is based on the equally new term [[wh-word]] (or [[wh-pronoun]]).
    933 bytes (121 words) - 15:38, 10 June 2009
  • ...sion]] and [[reference]], although these terms have acquired more specific content in particular frameworks. The term denotation is sometimes used in oppositi
    1,016 bytes (137 words) - 08:48, 6 June 2014
  • *content item > grammatical word > clitic > inflectional affix
    2 KB (192 words) - 17:07, 29 October 2007
  • ...that converted forms are derived by means of an [[affix]] without phonetic content, a so-called zero-affix or [[null morpheme]]. Others have challenged this v *Marchand, H. 1969. ''The Categories and Types of Present-day English Word-Formation.'' München: Beck.
    2 KB (245 words) - 17:32, 18 May 2008
  • In linguistics the word ‘proposition’ is defined as the content of a sentence on the basis of the meaning of a simple statement, which can
    2 KB (235 words) - 16:52, 12 April 2014
  • ...of the content of that expression, often making use of [[decomposition of word meaning]]. The semantic work which has been done within generative grammar
    3 KB (358 words) - 18:19, 17 February 2009
  • where <math>f_i</math> is the frequency of the i-th word-form, and N the length of the sample<sup>1</sup> . ...tions for the expected size of the vocabulary of a text with a length of N word-forms and for the expected number of words with an assigned frequency (''ib
    26 KB (3,899 words) - 14:02, 28 November 2007
  • ...ogical proximity (or remoteness) of the texts may suggest relationships in content (or the possible lack of such), which would consequently determine a recons ...text and mean word length. He also presented initial calculations of mean word length in the letters of St. Paul. He finally arrived at the conclusion tha
    24 KB (3,529 words) - 13:13, 28 November 2007