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  • ...contains the actual or attested words plus the potential, but not attested words. ..., approval, recite, recital, derive'', and ''describe'', and the potential words *''derival'' and *''describal''.
    722 bytes (101 words) - 21:26, 19 February 2009
  • ...xicon]] of the speakers and can be retrieved from there, as opposed to a [[potential word]], which could be used, but has to be formed on the fly by speakers (s ...s'' is an actual word for most speakers, while ''mandatoriness'' is only a potential, but not an actual word for most speakers.
    1 KB (140 words) - 00:14, 10 August 2007
  • ...that some speaker has been observed to use (in ordinary speech). Hence, [[potential word]]s, which are actually [[accidental gap]]s, are not stored in the perm ...proval, recite, recital, derive'', and ''describe'', but not the potential words ''derival'' and ''describal''. Halle (1973) uses the term 'Dictionary' when
    825 bytes (114 words) - 18:42, 27 September 2014
  • ...sed to complex words which have been created on the fly. Institutionalized words need not be [[lexicalized]], i.e. have special properties not predictable f ...come to have a specific reference. Following Bauer 1983, I shall term such words ''institutionalized''. ''Institutionalized'' and ''lexicalized'' are thus,
    1 KB (157 words) - 14:57, 20 May 2013
  • ...ogy]] that is characterized by relatively concrete morphological meanings, potential semantic irregularity, restrictions in applicability, and so on. It contras ...ion''' is a one of the major types of morphological operation by which new words are formed by adding an affix to a [[base]].
    3 KB (369 words) - 18:48, 12 February 2009
  • ...meanings more than word y) and even the ratio between the polysemy of two words values can be specified (word x has twice as many meanings as word y), sinc
    4 KB (691 words) - 14:05, 9 August 2014
  • ...the Lexicon in a great number of theories. See [[permanent lexicon]] and [[potential lexicon]].
    3 KB (472 words) - 09:02, 26 May 2013
  • ...xt by particular features – repetitions, omissions, occurrences of certain words and constructions – which have in common the property of signaling that t ...sentence “John”. If the first sentence were not part of the example and a potential reader were only given the sentence “He is a very good fisherman.” the
    22 KB (3,425 words) - 17:49, 26 June 2010
  • ...greement is only possible on vowel-initial words, but there are also a few words beginning with a vowel that do not take these prefixes. ...iments have shown that Tsez speakers do not assign any noun classes to new words for objects they do not know or where they do not know what they look like.
    50 KB (8,020 words) - 17:31, 2 March 2018
  • # Analogy between stylometry and graphology indicating potential effectiveness of the stylometric analysis. Lutosławski argued that if the
    24 KB (3,529 words) - 13:13, 28 November 2007
  • ...efined the “literaricity” as the totality of text elements, which have the potential capacity to “inspire” the readers’ aesthetic perception. An aesthetic ...nomothetic character of Jarcho’s exact text analysis is obvious. In other words, it includes the inductive discovery of textual interrelations and laws, wh
    16 KB (2,394 words) - 17:14, 21 June 2014