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Unit 2: Make a Difference!
Unit 2: Make a Difference!

... ELP.6-8.S3.L2- Student delivers short oral presentations and composes written narratives or informational texts about familiar texts, topics, experiences, or events. ELP.6-8.S5.L2- Student gathers information from provided sources and records some data and information. ELP.6-8.S9.L2 Student recounts ...
On Phrasal and Prepositional Verb Projections in Turkish
On Phrasal and Prepositional Verb Projections in Turkish

... b. Drunks would put off the customers. The first intuition about these two sentences is that they have a similar structure. This is due to the fact that they are both comprised of the lexical items out of the same lexical categories. If we parse them, we see that there is a noun (Drunks), a modality ...
Finiteness in Hinuq
Finiteness in Hinuq

... Not all simple verb forms occurring in independent clauses can express negative polarity (table 2). In addition, three forms contain a negative marker that differs synchronically from the standard negative marker –me. All participles have a negative counterpart whereas the Infinitive and the majorit ...
Frequent Problems in Critical Writing
Frequent Problems in Critical Writing

... to some readers and therefore ought to be avoided. The recourse to the exclusive use of she or her is an unsatisfactory solution to the problem. Writers ought to use he or she or he/she (though many people find these cumbersome and inelegant) or they ought to render their sentences in such a way tha ...
Local Grammars and Compound Verb Lemmatization in Serbo
Local Grammars and Compound Verb Lemmatization in Serbo

... recognition of string sequences in a digital text which represent such forms. NLP processing of a text in a highly inflective language needs to include thorough lexical preprocessing and lemmatization, that must take into account various inflected forms of words. The goal of lemmatization is to dete ...
Syntax I. Word order and information structure 1. Wide scope
Syntax I. Word order and information structure 1. Wide scope

... b. There is plenty of food in the fridge. 2. Narrow scope; contrastive context Wide scope informative context is rather rare in reality, where constant foregrounding of new and backgrounding of old information is taking place, and where words may be anaphoric not only to previously mentioned but als ...
Lecture 8
Lecture 8

... The relation . is used to mark linear precedence. Example 5: NP < JJ . VP This pattern matches an NP that immediately dominates a JJ and is immediately followed by a VP, e.g. the NP dominating “the austere company dormitory” in (11.12) (NP (NP (DT the) (JJ austere) (NN company) (NN dormitory)) (VP ( ...
Glossary
Glossary

... The element of the noun group that comes after the head word and whose function is to qualify the head word. Qualifiers can be either an embedded clause (eg A verb that contains a preposition is often a phrasal verb) or a prepositional phrase (eg The house at the end of the street was said to be hau ...
May I check the English of your paper!!!
May I check the English of your paper!!!

... study. Few rules have been devised though in certain cases those corrections are optional. Few syntactic rules can be generated Missing preposition (MT): For missing preposition we have used the appropriate preposition list but it wasn’t enough to detect. We have devised some handcrafted rules based ...
How to read with key words
How to read with key words

... - Wal-Mart is one of the largest employers in the US. In fact it’s the largest (A dire il vero) ...
Agreement of the Predicator with the Subject
Agreement of the Predicator with the Subject

... The number of victims is higher that was at first thought. When the subject is expressed by a singular pronoun, including the indefinites (they are normally treated as singular): each, either, neither, someone, anyone, somebody, everybody, everyone, nobody, no one, something, nothing, the predicator ...
Passive. - JapanEd
Passive. - JapanEd

... ii) make the original SUBJECT (John) into an AGENT with the preposition "by." So, "John read the letter" becomes"The letter was read by John." We may also leave out the agent and simply say, "The letter was read." In English we might want to make a sentence passive for what might vaguely be called r ...
Verbal Nouns and Event Structure in Scottish Gaelic
Verbal Nouns and Event Structure in Scottish Gaelic

... tributions of the verbal noun to the aspectual interpretation of predicational phrases, and to do so in such a way as to reconcile its use in the nominal contexts as well. As a starting point , some background to the linguistic structures of Scottish Gaelic (henceforth S Gaelic) is necessary. SGaeli ...
AP English Summer Assignment File
AP English Summer Assignment File

... Use of a word to mean something other than its ordinary meaning ...
Reviewing Parts of Sentence Ch 11
Reviewing Parts of Sentence Ch 11

... A woman on my street received an award. Complete Subject: All words that go with the who? Or what did something? ...
Teaching Grammar for Writing
Teaching Grammar for Writing

... making a soft black drizzle, with flakes of soot in it as big as fullgrown snow-flakes — gone into mourning, one might imagine, for the death of the sun. Dogs, undistinguishable in mire. Horses, scarcely better; splashed to their very blinkers. Foot passengers, jostling one another’s umbrellas in a ...
Form and meaning in morphology: the case of Dutch `agent nouns
Form and meaning in morphology: the case of Dutch `agent nouns

... It will be clear that if scheme (9) is correct, the polysemy that we find for -er nouns should also be found for other types of derived words with an Agent interpretation. Moreover, since the structure of conceptual categories is presumably language-independent, we expect the same polysemy to exist ...
sentence - Greer Middle College
sentence - Greer Middle College

... as: • He is taller than I (am tall). • This helps you as much as (it helps) me. • She is as noisy as I (am). • Comparisons are really shorthand sentences which usually omit words, such as those in the parentheses in the sentences above. If you complete the comparison in your head, you can choose the ...
Conciseness - Troy University
Conciseness - Troy University

... on the field that alternates between the players' passively waiting with no action taking place between the pitches to the batter and exploding into action when the batter hits a pitched ball to one of the players and he fields it. Revised: Baseball has a rhythm that alternates between waiting and e ...
3.1.2 Regular ㄷ verbs
3.1.2 Regular ㄷ verbs

... A Korean verb form consists of the stem of the verb (the part before the -다 of the dictionary form), followed by at least one particle. So if there is going to be an irregularity, it will have to be at the contact point between stem and first particle. Particles are simpler than stems, so we will co ...
GRS LX 700 Language Acquisition and Linguistic Theory
GRS LX 700 Language Acquisition and Linguistic Theory

... ground an utterance), and is signaled by different things in different languages. ...
Light Nouns and predicative Infinitives
Light Nouns and predicative Infinitives

... (13) has the same flavor of redundancy, but this does not affect the grammaticality, in contrast to (10a). Note that the resumptive pronoun in the embedded clause is necessary. This shows that there are two different clauses underlying. In contrast, in Alemannic and Bavarian, an infinitive with the ...
Dortmund 1 - Constraints in Discourse
Dortmund 1 - Constraints in Discourse

... To sum up, Mazandarani has at least two plural markers, hence two distinct ways of pluralization.* A noun can be pluralized by adding -a as well as -shan; however, a noun, which is pluralized in these two different ways, conveys different meanings. For example, dayi ‘uncle on mother side’ can be pl ...
The Participle and the Participial Phrase
The Participle and the Participial Phrase

... A peeled and sliced cucumber needs to be added to the salad. Peeled describes cucumber…adjective, thus a participle Sliced describes cucumber…adjective, thus a participle Needs is the action of the sentence…verb ...
Action Verb
Action Verb

... good weather. Also, he ________________ cars when he doesn’t want to put too many miles on his own car. Often he ________________ on airplanes for the longer journeys. However, for variety he ________________ a ticket for the train. It’s a more entertaining way to travel than the plane. Next time, h ...
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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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