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Prague Dependency Treebank 1.0 Functional Generative Description
Prague Dependency Treebank 1.0 Functional Generative Description

... communicative dynamism ...
RunOns Splices FragsUpdated2007
RunOns Splices FragsUpdated2007

... Because is a subordinating conjunction that makes the first clause dependent on the second clause. Do not use a coordinating conjunction to link a dependent clause and an independent clause; rather, use only a comma. For example: Since my parents were already here, they knew English. *Note: This run ...
Español III/ III Honores Guía de estudiar: El examen
Español III/ III Honores Guía de estudiar: El examen

...  El pretérito irregular p. 302: o ei  preferir, pedir, reír, sonreír, divertirse, mentir, sentirse, competir, despedirse, repetir, seguir, servir, vestirse o ou  dormir, morir, dormirse, morirse  Otros verbos reflexivos p. 305 *You are using the verbs from the chapter and the vocabulary in ord ...
Sentences to Essays Lecture
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... noun or pronoun, a participle, and any related modifiers • Absolute phrases modify the whole sentence • Example: The season nearly finished, Kobe Bryant and Derek Fisher emerged as true leaders. ...
The Forms of Personal Pronouns A
The Forms of Personal Pronouns A

... 6. The train stopped, and (he and I, him and me) got on. [Are the pronouns used as subjects of a verb?] 7. How could (I, me) have forgotten about the dance! 8. Were (they, them) waiting for us? 9. (You and I, You and me) will have the same lunch period next year. 10. (He and she, Him and her) have k ...
Introduction to Stress in American English Words
Introduction to Stress in American English Words

... stress (for example:  in “information”). Don’t worry too much about secondary stress (for example:  in “information”). Secondary stress occurs in words of three or more syllables, usually two syllables before or after the primary-stressed syllable. In many dictionaries, primary stress is indica ...
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... 6, 9, 12), translated as either ‘at’, ‘in’, or ‘from’; and ne ‘of’ (12). In most cases, the context will determine which meaning a certain preposition has. ...
Clause Types - Immaculata Catholic School
Clause Types - Immaculata Catholic School

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... The appositive is probably the most efficient technique we have for combining ideas. An appositive or appositive phrase is a renaming, a re-identification, of something earlier in the text. You can think of an appositive as a modifying clause from which the clausal machinery (usually a relative pron ...
Identifying Text Genres Using Phrasal Verbs  {kdempsey, pmccarthy, d.mcnamara} @mail.psyc.memphis.edu)
Identifying Text Genres Using Phrasal Verbs {kdempsey, pmccarthy, d.mcnamara} @mail.psyc.memphis.edu)

... variation (e.g., Biber, 1988, Louwerse et al., 2004) have failed to produce a simple and effective method for computationally distinguishing these text types. Indeed, Biber (1988) using 67 lexical features could not determine any spoken/written dimension and Louwerse et al. (2004) using over 200 tex ...
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Unit 1 Homes and habits - Assets

... Verbs that describe states are not normally used in continuous forms: We often believe that living in a cave … not we are often believing inside a cave it remains cool … not it is remaining ...
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... The beach umbrella casted a longer shadow as it got later.   ...
greek grammar handout 2012 - University of Dallas Classics
greek grammar handout 2012 - University of Dallas Classics

... accented on the ult gets a grave if followed by another accented word, and an acute if followed by punctuation, or by an enclitic (i.e. by a word not accented -- for a list of enclitics see § IX). (2) C i r c u m f l e x ^ can fall only on a long penult or long ult (never before the penult, and nev ...
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Development of the Term Hedges

... As to the motivation for the use of hedges, a lot of the discussion has concentrated on their use in spoken discourse, and the most frequently mentioned motivating factor is politeness, as defined by Brown/Levinson (1987). In their view, hedges are mainly used for negative politeness in face-saving, ...
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Adverbs from Adjectives

... A few specific adverbs have no suffix and are identical to the adjective. The following words can be used as adjectives or adverbs. When used as adverbs, they look like a singular masculine form of the adjective, but since they actually modify a verb, they do not have gender and will not change endi ...
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Name: ____________ Hour: ______ Everything You Need to Know

... Ex. Charlie himself would never sink that low. (himself is intensifying Charlie, making it stronger). Intensive and Reflexive Pronouns: Myself, Yourself, Himself, Herself, Itself, Themselves, Ourselves *Never, EVER Theirselves, Theirself, Hisself ...
French For Mathematicians: A linguistic approach
French For Mathematicians: A linguistic approach

... way sounds are pronounced slowly change over time until words and grammatical forms are not recognizable. Some new words are coined, or borrowed to other languages, some come out of use and eventually disappear, some see their meaning progressively or abruptly change. Grammar, morphology, and syntax ...
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Span II 2.27

... Making adjectives agree in number ...
Notes on Clauses - Amazon Web Services
Notes on Clauses - Amazon Web Services

... C. The subordinators in adjective clauses are called relative pronouns. 1. These are the most important relative pronouns: who, whom, that, which. These relative pronouns can be omitted when they are objects of verbs. When they are objects of prepositions, they can be omitted when they do not follow ...
THE CASES
THE CASES

... • Used for addressing someone and almost always exactly the same as the nominative except in the 2nd declension where e is used in the singular. The e is dropped after i. – Marce, ad fenestram ambulā – Iūlia, surge. – Caecilī, mēcum venī ...
0530 spanish (foreign language)
0530 spanish (foreign language)

... Counting words (a) In letters ignore any address or date. Ignore also any title which the candidate has invented. No marks may be gained for the above. (b) Count up to exactly 140 words. Award no more marks thereafter, either for Communication or Language. But see note (e). (c) Our definition of a w ...
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... the reader knows it is the suitcase, not the blanket, that’s being hidden, the writer has placed the pronoun closer to its true antecedent. ...
Style guide: writing - LLAS Centre for Languages, Linguistics and
Style guide: writing - LLAS Centre for Languages, Linguistics and

... Language tends to change rapidly in this area and you should seek up-to-date advice – and ask people how they would prefer to be described. In general, avoid depersonalising people by turning them into collective nouns (‘the disabled’). Instead say ‘students/people with disabilities’ or ‘disabled st ...
FREN 2201 - New York City College of Technology
FREN 2201 - New York City College of Technology

... Students and all others who work with information, ideas, texts, images, music, inventions, and other intellectual property owe their audience and sources accuracy and honesty in using, crediting, and editing sources. As a community of intellectual and professional workers, the College recognizes it ...
On the prepositional nature of non
On the prepositional nature of non

... A fairly standard assumption within these approaches is that prepositions and verbs are two (functional) categories that must be teased apart: (light) verbs categorize roots, prepositions do not; (light) verbs assign structural Case, prepositions do inherent Case; (light) verbs encode ϕ-features, pr ...
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Latin syntax

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