01281nam a22002177a 450000500170000000800410001702000210005804000100007908200160008910000210010524500440012625000120017026000410018230000110022350506710023454600120090565000230091794200070094099900170094795200990096420260413164119.0260413b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a0091509211 (pbk) cUE-CL a401.9bAi91 aAitchison, Jean  aThe articulate mammalc/ Jean Aitchison a2nd Ed. aLondon:bHutchinson & Co Ltd.,c1976 a291 p. a1 The great automatic grammatizator Need anything be innate? 2 Animals that try to talk Is language restricted to humans? 3 Grandmama's teeth Is there biological evidence for innate language capacity? 4 Predestinate grooves Is there a pre-ordained language 'programme'? 5 The blueprint in the brain What grammatical information might conveivably be innate? 6 Chattering children Are children following 'rules' when they learn to speak? 7 Puzzling it out Exactly how do children learn language? 8 Celestial unintelligibility Why propose a transformational grammar? 9 The white elephant problem Do we need a transformational grammar in order to speak? aEnglish aArticulate--Mammal cBK c26014d26013 00104071aLISTbLISTd2026-04-13l0o401.9 Ai91pT6190Dr2026-04-13 16:27:00w2026-04-13yBK