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View Extract - Cambridge Scholars Publishing
View Extract - Cambridge Scholars Publishing

... nominalizing morpheme (-er, -ing, to) and/or rearranging their semantic content, the consequence of which is shifting the profile from the relation/process to a thing (a relation/process participant or the area containing the relation/ process phases). According to the cognitive definition, the traj ...
X-BAR MOTIVATED
X-BAR MOTIVATED

... arguments. These requirements are both syntactic and semantic. In John ate disgusting store-bought cookies and John felt deep-rooted emotional pain, both ate and felt have NP subjects and objects. The verbs have c-selected to NPs. But John is an agent of eating and an experiencer of feeling pain. Li ...


... You only really need to know that about 'shall' in modern English. Read the rest of this only if you want to know more about how some older speakers still use 'shall'. Formerly, in older grammar, 'shall' was used as an alternative to 'will' with 'I' and 'we'. Today, 'will' is normally used. When we ...
Seminar workbook for Bc study programmes
Seminar workbook for Bc study programmes

... minutes without moving, unsure of what to do. All options seemed equally unappealing. Then, immediately above me, I heard gunshots. On other occasions the noise might have been sinister. Now they seemed welcoming, almost homely. I clambered upwards, and soon found a track. Following it around a bluf ...
MOR - TalkBank
MOR - TalkBank

... the following rules are observed: 1. Each word group (see below) on the %mor line is surrounded by spaces or an initial tab to correspond to the corresponding space-delimited word group on the main line. The correspondence matches each %mor word (morphological word) to a main line word in a left-to- ...
23 THE SYNTACTIC FUNCTIONS OF PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES
23 THE SYNTACTIC FUNCTIONS OF PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES

... purpose, we prepositions expressing either the material cause or the psychological cause (motive). Most of adjuncts expresses the meaning of place and time. For example, a sentence in the short story about science fiction, “She had a very happy life until she was murdered on her wedding day”. On he ...
e diachrony of light and auxiliary verbs in Indo-Aryan
e diachrony of light and auxiliary verbs in Indo-Aryan

... it is to be interpreted. In addition to CVs and converbs, modern IA languages employ other verb-verb collocations (discussed in §3), where the first member appears as a past or present participle, rather than an absolutive; these collocations typically exhibit continuative semantics, rather than the ...
the structure of non-finite relative clauses in arabic
the structure of non-finite relative clauses in arabic

... /subst. 'correspondent; newspaper reporter'/; fern, 'residing'; and the like (for particulars see reference grammars of Standard Arabic). Arabic adjectives and participles, when operate as predicates or attributive modifiers, display full agreement with their subjects or head nouns, limited only by ...
The creation of tense and aspect systems in the languages of the
The creation of tense and aspect systems in the languages of the

... Information on these languages was available only through published material, usually reference grammars. The test of the hypotheses required identifying verbal inflection as belonging to one of the super-categories of valence, voice, aspect, tense, mood or agreement. Despite the fact that some desc ...
A Study for Disambiguation of Japanese Compound Verbs
A Study for Disambiguation of Japanese Compound Verbs

... sub-entry of utsu “hit” having a complement such as ‘kare wa’ and ‘udon o’ in IPAL dictionary. When we can identify the sub-entry of utsu “hit” which fulfills this condition, a semantic label like seisan “production” is selected as the semantic feature for utsu “hit”. The second step is to classify ...
ON THE PROSODIC FEATURES OF THE MODERN ENGLISH
ON THE PROSODIC FEATURES OF THE MODERN ENGLISH

... the element einen Ball. (The occurrence of einen Ball in front position would render the word order emotive.) It should be added that the tendency towards the basic distribution of CD becomes particularly evident if such semantic relations are involved as are incapable of working counter to this dis ...
Adverbs in the Sanskrit wordnet
Adverbs in the Sanskrit wordnet

... ◦ Answers to the questions as “how,” “where,” “when” and “how much” ...
Adding Adjectives and Adverbs From
Adding Adjectives and Adverbs From

... Many verbs express action that is performed by the subject. There are thousands of such verbs in English. The following are examples. ...
Pictorial English grammar
Pictorial English grammar

... The difference between this one and the fifth sentence pattern is that the complement is replaced by the to infinitive. That is, the portion of the to infinitive, go there comes from the sentence, S1 go there (S1: subject). Then the question is: what does S1 imply? In this sentence pattern, the subj ...
Walenty: Towards a comprehensive valence dictionary of Polish
Walenty: Towards a comprehensive valence dictionary of Polish

... The aim of this paper is to present an early version of Walenty, a comprehensive valence dictionary of Polish developed at the Institute of Computer Science, Polish Academy of Sciences (ICS PAS).1 The dictionary is meant to be both human- and machine-readable; in particular, it is being employed by ...
A SUBTITLING ANALYSIS OF VERBS AND VERB PHRASES IN
A SUBTITLING ANALYSIS OF VERBS AND VERB PHRASES IN

... The research paper studies about subtitling variations of verbs and verb phrases in movie The Magic of Belle Isle. The study aims at identifying the subtitling variations of verbs and verb phrases and describing the readability of subtitling of verbs and verb phrases in The Magic of Belle Isle movie ...
33 HOW COMPLEMENTS DIFFER FROM ADJUNCTS IN PERSIAN
33 HOW COMPLEMENTS DIFFER FROM ADJUNCTS IN PERSIAN

... the term 'complement' in a very restricted sense covering only the predicative complement of subject. Among other functions of the NP he just discusses direct object. As for 'adjunct' and the syntactic categories that play this role he mentions nothing. Abumahbub (2004) makes a distinction between a ...
Up above as a Complex Preposition
Up above as a Complex Preposition

... A prepositional phrase can be used as a sentence adverbial. Here are two examples from BNC: (7) It was good to be a flyer, up above it all, godlike in your vision. (BNC G0L 707) (8) My lad took me blackberryin' a month or two back, up above the quarry, and I seen'em.’ (BNC HTH 634) The string can be ...
Practice sheets for the sentences in this booklet are available in a
Practice sheets for the sentences in this booklet are available in a

... sentence. The Q&A flow includes questions for every word in the sentence. The difficulty level increases by grade level during the course of the year. Sample Question and Answer Flow: The bears ran to the woods. 1. What ran to the woods? bears – SN 4. To what? woods – OP 2. What is being said about ...
written ambonese malay, 1895–1992
written ambonese malay, 1895–1992

... process, it also occurs in a number of other Malay dialects, often in the same words. For example, sudah becomes udah or dah in some western dialects of Malay. Note that Minangkabau also has jang, and that the front vowel /e/ in AM deng indicates a more complex history than direct descent from a pre ...
finding clauses in unrestricted text by finitary and stochastic methods
finding clauses in unrestricted text by finitary and stochastic methods

... parser was given the rather difficult and substantive tasks of finding basic, non-recursive clauses in continuous text, in which each word had been tagged with a part of speech label. Parts of the tagged Brown corpus were used, representing the genres of both informative and ...
A Grammar for Finnish Discourse Patterns
A Grammar for Finnish Discourse Patterns

... more general entries above them in the hierarchy. Inheritance hierarchies are based on typed feature structures: each sign is associated with a type which constrains free unification of the otherwise compatible signs. In HPSG, the arguments of lexical entries are divided into complements and specifi ...
1 Lexical-Constructional Subsumption in Resultative Constructions
1 Lexical-Constructional Subsumption in Resultative Constructions

... will become apparent in our analysis below—is the most promising approach to resultatives, i.e. one where the syntactic configuration is motivated by the principled interaction between lexical and constructional structure. This is the perspective generally adopted by constructionist studies within C ...
to the entire required Student Handout for this class in MS
to the entire required Student Handout for this class in MS

... discussion as soon as possible. Chapters 2 – 7 include ESL TIPS. If your native language isn’t English, these tips can help you with some of the peculiarities of English. Future chapters will include additional sections for helping you look back at what you've learned: Review and Practice, which hel ...
CASPR Research Report 2006-01 HOW COMPLEX
CASPR Research Report 2006-01 HOW COMPLEX

... sentences. There are two kinds of questions in English, simple yes/no questions (Is he here?) and “wh-questions” formed with the “wh-words” (who, what, which, whose, where, when, why, how). Both kinds are very common in children’s speech but were not mentioned in the original D-Level scale. Although ...
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Chinese grammar



This article concerns Standard Chinese. For the grammars of other forms of Chinese, see their respective articles via links on Chinese language and varieties of Chinese.The grammar of Standard Chinese shares many features with other varieties of Chinese. The language almost entirely lacks inflection, so that words typically have only one grammatical form. Categories such as number (singular or plural) and verb tense are frequently not expressed by any grammatical means, although there are several particles that serve to express verbal aspect, and to some extent mood.The basic word order is subject–verb–object (SVO). Otherwise, Chinese is chiefly a head-last language, meaning that modifiers precede the words they modify – in a noun phrase, for example, the head noun comes last, and all modifiers, including relative clauses, come in front of it. (This phenomenon is more typically found in SOV languages like Turkish and Japanese.)Chinese frequently uses serial verb constructions, which involve two or more verbs or verb phrases in sequence. Chinese prepositions behave similarly to serialized verbs in some respects (several of the common prepositions can also be used as full verbs), and they are often referred to as coverbs. There are also location markers, placed after a noun, and hence often called postpositions; these are often used in combination with a coverb. Predicate adjectives are normally used without a copular verb (""to be""), and can thus be regarded as a type of verb.As in many east Asian languages, classifiers or measure words are required when using numerals (and sometimes other words such as demonstratives) with nouns. There are many different classifiers in the language, and each countable noun generally has a particular classifier associated with it. Informally, however, it is often acceptable to use the general classifier 个 [個] ge in place of other specific classifiers.Examples given in this article use simplified Chinese characters (with the traditional characters following in brackets if they differ) and standard pinyin Romanization.
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