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Conjunction Reduction. Noun Phrase Deletion, and Gapping
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Minoru Nakau
Published/Copyright:
March 29, 2018
Published Online: 2018-3-29
Published in Print: 1972-6-1
© 2018 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Contents
- Articles
- Two Modes of Counting in Japanese
- Agent and Source in Japanese
- The Te-ni-wo-ha: An Etymological Study
- Japanese Terms of Address; some usages of the first and second person pronouns
- An Analysis of Japanese Verb ‘Understand’
- Japanese Accentuation as a Restricted Tone System
- Conjunction Reduction. Noun Phrase Deletion, and Gapping
- Evidence of a Consonant Shift in 7th Century Japanese
- Ga-o Conversion and an Output Condition
- Towards a Family Tree for Accent in Japanese Dialects
- Squib: Negative Questions and Conveyed Meaning
- Generative Studies in Japanese: 1972--Bibliography
Articles in the same Issue
- Contents
- Articles
- Two Modes of Counting in Japanese
- Agent and Source in Japanese
- The Te-ni-wo-ha: An Etymological Study
- Japanese Terms of Address; some usages of the first and second person pronouns
- An Analysis of Japanese Verb ‘Understand’
- Japanese Accentuation as a Restricted Tone System
- Conjunction Reduction. Noun Phrase Deletion, and Gapping
- Evidence of a Consonant Shift in 7th Century Japanese
- Ga-o Conversion and an Output Condition
- Towards a Family Tree for Accent in Japanese Dialects
- Squib: Negative Questions and Conveyed Meaning
- Generative Studies in Japanese: 1972--Bibliography