Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 35Carleton University, 2004 - Algonquian Indians |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 50
Page 64
... fact , the gender - neutral forms of names appear to be most commonly con- sidered as default masculine forms , and the -sei suffix is then added to create feminine forms . These two suffixes are commonly used in other contexts of the ...
... fact , the gender - neutral forms of names appear to be most commonly con- sidered as default masculine forms , and the -sei suffix is then added to create feminine forms . These two suffixes are commonly used in other contexts of the ...
Page 251
... fact be external to the relative clause itself : if it were internal to the clause , then two expres- sions representing arguments of the same verb would be proximate here , in violation of the usual constraints on obviation . Note ...
... fact be external to the relative clause itself : if it were internal to the clause , then two expres- sions representing arguments of the same verb would be proximate here , in violation of the usual constraints on obviation . Note ...
Page 425
... fact that the numbers in the two columns line up so neatly again indicates a strong tendency for subject to correlate with proximate . In fact , status as subject versus object versus second object is one of the chief factors that ...
... fact that the numbers in the two columns line up so neatly again indicates a strong tendency for subject to correlate with proximate . In fact , status as subject versus object versus second object is one of the chief factors that ...
Contents
George F Aubin | 13 |
Richard Burleson | 35 |
Andrew Cowell Alonzo Moss Sr | 61 |
Copyright | |
15 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Aboriginal Algonquian American animate appear Arapaho arguments arrived August bags Band Bingham boundary Bury Cameron Canada characters Chief clause complete conjunct continue Cree Crown Lands culture demonstrative Dennis Department deux endings English example expressed fact final forms function given Gull Bay head Huron ibid inanimate independent Indian indicate inflection initial Innu John July Keating Lake land language Letter linguistic live marked meaning Michigan miles names Native North Note noun object obviative occur October Ojibwe Ontario overt party person phrase plural position possible present Press primitives pronouns proximate recorded reference relative remain Report reserve result River Sault sentence September specific structure suffixes suggest survey Table teachers timber tion traditional treaty University verb Winnipeg