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6 A-movement
6 A-movement

... it would traditionally be said that the sentence consists of two constituents (the word students and the word protested), that each of these constituents belongs to a specific grammatical category (students being a plural noun and protested a past tense verb) and that each serves a specific grammati ...
Grammar in Newspaper Headlines
Grammar in Newspaper Headlines

... As it was already mentioned above, block language often consists of lexical items lower than sentences, for example of just one dependent clause or a noun phrase, each functioning independently as in How coal is the future (T) or When boys and girls come out to play (G) or New raps for Mr & Mrs Can ...
COMPASS Placement Test Review Packet
COMPASS Placement Test Review Packet

Challenging Discrete Approaches to Secondary
Challenging Discrete Approaches to Secondary

... able to reach on these constructions in the last three decades is excruciatingly small and does ...
The constructionalization of body part terms in Arabic
The constructionalization of body part terms in Arabic

... placing the learner in the best conditions to make the kinds of choices a native speaker would make in similar situations. Consequently, usage-based instruction will be inductive (since rules emerge out of usage), implicit (since syntax has no particular status in acquisition), and will include as f ...
Language Arts - Alton School District
Language Arts - Alton School District

... 1/15/07 10:53:14 AM ...
Dependency Parsing with an Extended Finite
Dependency Parsing with an Extended Finite

... Dependency approaches to syntactic representation use the notion of syntactic relation to associate surface lexical items. Melčuk (1988) presents a comprehensive exposition of dependency syntax. Computational approaches to dependency syntax have recently become quite popular (e.g., a workshop dedic ...
A Writing Guide for Petrological - Department of Earth and Planetary
A Writing Guide for Petrological - Department of Earth and Planetary

... detailed characteristics tend to be idiosyncratic to the author and the subject material. The best overall. short-term solution we can suggest is that authors (especially those with limited experience, try, as much as is practicable, to write their first drafts in the simplest of sentences. Then, af ...
Grammar: Part II - Parts of the Sentence
Grammar: Part II - Parts of the Sentence

... also one of the skills employers look for. You have your pen in your hand and a stack of paper in front of you - but the pages are blank. You have a lot of interesting things you could say, but you hesitate to write them because you are afraid that your paper will come back covered with corrections ...
Book of abstracts: General session part 1: Authors AL
Book of abstracts: General session part 1: Authors AL

... placing the learner in the best conditions to make the kinds of choices a native speaker would make in similar situations. Consequently, usage-based instruction will be inductive (since rules emerge out of usage), implicit (since syntax has no particular status in acquisition), and will include as f ...
Aalborg Universitet Socio-cognitive salience and the role of the local
Aalborg Universitet Socio-cognitive salience and the role of the local

... placing the learner in the best conditions to make the kinds of choices a native speaker would make in similar situations. Consequently, usage-based instruction will be inductive (since rules emerge out of usage), implicit (since syntax has no particular status in acquisition), and will include as f ...
active voice - Cloudfront.net
active voice - Cloudfront.net

... Voice is the form a transitive verb takes to indicate whether the subject of the verb performs or receives the action. When the subject of a verb performs the action, the verb is in the active voice. ...
Babcock, L., Stowe, J.C., Maloof, C.J., Brovetto, C., and Ullman, M.T.
Babcock, L., Stowe, J.C., Maloof, C.J., Brovetto, C., and Ullman, M.T.

... The third group of theories takes an intermediate position between the other two. These theories hypothesize that L2 learners initially depend largely on different substrates than do L1 speakers, but, with increasing exposure or proficiency, gradually come to rely on L1 neurocognition (Clahsen & Fel ...
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OBLIQUE ARGUMENTS RAISED

... heads. This claim has been made originally for on Salish languages, but it has been adapted to other languages as well. Second, we see the auxiliary HAVE as a (particular) spell out of auxiliary BE. This move, again, is not unique and it has been proposed for various languages before. Simply put, HA ...
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Referentiality in Spanish CPs Abstract: In this paper, we discuss the

... Note that semifactives can lose their factivity in questions, if embedded in the antecedent of a conditional, and under certain modals. Semifactives correspond to the Hooper & Thompson 1973 (H&T) class E predicates, and allow main clause phenomena (MCP), unlike true factives (H&T’s class D). Thus, w ...
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... within the lexical, grammatical and semantic capabilities of the system. The terms 'Robust NLP' [29, 88] and 'Partial Parsing' [120, 174, 82] have been used to describe the nature of systems which seek to analyse real text. As stated above, one of the major problems that such text produces is the pr ...
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Chapter 4 Extragrammatical expression of

... other categories (especially crucial is the boundary with epistemic modality, cf. Chapter 8), Aikhenvald (2003a: 18–20; 2004) prototypically applies the notion of evidentiality strategy to those grammatical phenomena that, even though belonging to modality, mood and other grammatical categories, do ...
The Gerund and the to-Infinitive as Subject
The Gerund and the to-Infinitive as Subject

... is relevant,” imply “sameness of time,” as in She enjoyed talking to him (69, 162). Temporal -ing complements receive similar treatment in Langacker’s theory of cognitive grammar: “temporal coincidence is the hallmark of -ing . . . there is always some form of temporal overlap between the main and s ...
1 Articles and one, a little/a few, this, that
1 Articles and one, a little/a few, this, that

... the) means to hold an official (usually political) position. To be out of office = to be no longer in power. E town the can be omitted when speaking of the subject's or speaker's own town: We go to town sometimes to buy clothes. We were in town last Monday. 9 this/these, that/those (demonstrative ad ...
prone - mthoyibi.files.wordpress
prone - mthoyibi.files.wordpress

... the) means to hold an official (usually political) position. To be out of office = to be no longer in power. E town the can be omitted when speaking of the subject's or speaker's own town: We go to town sometimes to buy clothes. We were in town last Monday. 9 this/these, that/those (demonstrative ad ...
Aspects of the Syntactic Problems of Esan Learners
Aspects of the Syntactic Problems of Esan Learners

... serves “an inductive investigative approach based on the distinctive elements in a language” (LinguaLinks Library, 2004). Therefore, to identify the linguistic habits of the L1, the researcher must resort to CA. This is because the habits of the L1 are different from the target language (TL), and th ...
Deep properties of surface pronouns: pronominal predicate
Deep properties of surface pronouns: pronominal predicate

... Bulgaria became voted out became Sweden it ‘Bulgaria was voted out. Was Sweden?’ c. Storbritannia er alltid med. Er Italia (det)? Great Britain is always with is Italy it ‘Great Britain is always in. Is Italy?’ ...
MOVEMENT IN RESTRICTIVE RELATIVE CLAUSES by SUSAN K
MOVEMENT IN RESTRICTIVE RELATIVE CLAUSES by SUSAN K

... suggests, determine syntactic relationships on the basis of the order and cooccurrence of their words. ...
An Analysis of Grammatical Errors in Writing
An Analysis of Grammatical Errors in Writing

... theory of grammatical errors taxonomy by Ho (2005). They are errors regarding nouns and noun groups, errors regarding verbs and verb groups, error regarding preposition, and errors regarding sentence structure. However, the errors regarding noun and noun groups consist of unnecessary insertion /over ...
From Words to Works
From Words to Works

... II. Write an appropriate adjective in each blank: The _______________ man and the _______________ woman went to the _______________ mall. While there, they saw some _______________ puppies in the pet store, ate at a _______________ restaurant in the food court, and bought several _______________ pie ...
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Yiddish grammar

The morphology of the Yiddish language bears many similarities to that of German, with crucial elements originating from Slavic languages, Hebrew, and Aramaic. In fact, Yiddish incorporates an entire Semitic subsystem, as it is especially evident in religious and philosophical texts.
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