a contrastive analysis of plural forms of noun, pronoun, and article
... in this graduating paper namely: how are the general rules of English and Indonesian structure in plural form of nouns, pronouns, and articles; what are the differences and similarities between English and Indonesian structure in plural form of nouns, pronouns, and articles; and what are the possibl ...
... in this graduating paper namely: how are the general rules of English and Indonesian structure in plural form of nouns, pronouns, and articles; what are the differences and similarities between English and Indonesian structure in plural form of nouns, pronouns, and articles; and what are the possibl ...
Jurnal Bahasa dan Budaya
... terms of the strategy of how English passive voice (SL) are most appropriately translated into Indonesian (TL), so that the conveyed meaning or message can be fully retained or preserved. This step of data analysis is expected to reveal whether the SL passive voices are equivalently translated into ...
... terms of the strategy of how English passive voice (SL) are most appropriately translated into Indonesian (TL), so that the conveyed meaning or message can be fully retained or preserved. This step of data analysis is expected to reveal whether the SL passive voices are equivalently translated into ...
Pronoun Study Guide
... or pronoun it’s modifying, but not necessarily. ****The way to identify an intensive pronoun is to remove it from the sentence; if it’s an intensive pronoun, the sentence will still make sense. If the sentence no longer makes sense, it’s a reflexive pronoun. Example: Did you yourself make the cake? ...
... or pronoun it’s modifying, but not necessarily. ****The way to identify an intensive pronoun is to remove it from the sentence; if it’s an intensive pronoun, the sentence will still make sense. If the sentence no longer makes sense, it’s a reflexive pronoun. Example: Did you yourself make the cake? ...
Object Pronouns
... 8. We don’t want to tell you (pl., formal) the bad news (las malas noticiaz). ...
... 8. We don’t want to tell you (pl., formal) the bad news (las malas noticiaz). ...
Commands in Deni (Arawá)
... practices of the speech communities, which offers us clues about how such communities are socially organized. For instance, in Yankunytjatjara, an Australian language, parents-in-law cannot make a request for food directly addressed to the son-in-law (AIKHENVALD, 2015, p. 298). Yankunytjatjara inclu ...
... practices of the speech communities, which offers us clues about how such communities are socially organized. For instance, in Yankunytjatjara, an Australian language, parents-in-law cannot make a request for food directly addressed to the son-in-law (AIKHENVALD, 2015, p. 298). Yankunytjatjara inclu ...
Nothing Wrong with Finite T: Non-Agreeing Accusative Impersonal
... 2 Defective T: Long Distance Evaluation of Arguments 2.1 Cross-classifying Defective and Complete Categories As already mentioned, the verbs in (1) apparently do not agree with any of the overt NPs in the sentence. L&F and Harves (2003, 2006) take this lack of morphological agreement to indicate th ...
... 2 Defective T: Long Distance Evaluation of Arguments 2.1 Cross-classifying Defective and Complete Categories As already mentioned, the verbs in (1) apparently do not agree with any of the overt NPs in the sentence. L&F and Harves (2003, 2006) take this lack of morphological agreement to indicate th ...
Clause Processing in Complex Sentences
... subordination has the advantage of counting on the surveys already done by traditional grammars (e.g. Quirk et al., 1985). These surveys have also shown that the identification is sometimes complicated by the use of other signals instead of conjunctions such as inversions (Had she accepted the flowe ...
... subordination has the advantage of counting on the surveys already done by traditional grammars (e.g. Quirk et al., 1985). These surveys have also shown that the identification is sometimes complicated by the use of other signals instead of conjunctions such as inversions (Had she accepted the flowe ...
THE GREEK MYTHS
... suggestions seem perhaps hesitant or tntative, either because they were not well developed in ancient times, or because our historical information about them is so fragmentary. This study will graft onto the Euhemeristic rootstock, a number of concepts and sources of information which are available ...
... suggestions seem perhaps hesitant or tntative, either because they were not well developed in ancient times, or because our historical information about them is so fragmentary. This study will graft onto the Euhemeristic rootstock, a number of concepts and sources of information which are available ...
go¤jš, vGJjš k‰W« mo¥gil fâj brašghLfis nk«gL¤Jtj‰fhd gæ‰Á f£lf
... trousers 8.Thanks 9.People 10.Mumps 11.Cutting pliers 12.Tongs 13.Breeches 14.Measles 15.Annals 16.Anklets Game: 50 - 50 Quiz Group / Individual i) Teacher Produces a word from singular / plural ii) + 50, -50 marks are assigned for the right response. iii) The same is followed till the end. iv) + 50 ...
... trousers 8.Thanks 9.People 10.Mumps 11.Cutting pliers 12.Tongs 13.Breeches 14.Measles 15.Annals 16.Anklets Game: 50 - 50 Quiz Group / Individual i) Teacher Produces a word from singular / plural ii) + 50, -50 marks are assigned for the right response. iii) The same is followed till the end. iv) + 50 ...
A Lexicalized Tree Adjoining Grammar for English
... e l e m e n t a r y t r e e s . Each elementary tree is constrained to have at least one terminal symbol which acts as its anchor. The trees in I are called initial trees. Initial trees represent minimal linguistic structures which are defined to have a t least one terminal at the frontier (the anch ...
... e l e m e n t a r y t r e e s . Each elementary tree is constrained to have at least one terminal symbol which acts as its anchor. The trees in I are called initial trees. Initial trees represent minimal linguistic structures which are defined to have a t least one terminal at the frontier (the anch ...
The No-Nonsense Guide to Learning Chitumbuka: Volume 1
... the language. Although spoken throughout the Northern Region, Chitumbuka is not a national language of Malawi and, unlike its sister language of Chichewa, resources available to foreigners are limited. Last year, Mike Kang pioneered the first of the “No-Nonsense Guides” with an excellent introductio ...
... the language. Although spoken throughout the Northern Region, Chitumbuka is not a national language of Malawi and, unlike its sister language of Chichewa, resources available to foreigners are limited. Last year, Mike Kang pioneered the first of the “No-Nonsense Guides” with an excellent introductio ...
PDF Original Colour - University of Toronto
... own, probably Etruscan, before they received their alphabet direct from the Phenicians, quite independently of the Greeks, ...
... own, probably Etruscan, before they received their alphabet direct from the Phenicians, quite independently of the Greeks, ...
Lecture Notes: Chapter 3 - Web Hosting at UMass Amherst
... This might be due to a semantic effect, though there is considerable language variation here whose source is not fully known. Another possibility is that there is a determiner present even in (7a), but that it is silent. This would allow for the possibility that Specifier of NP is obligatorily fille ...
... This might be due to a semantic effect, though there is considerable language variation here whose source is not fully known. Another possibility is that there is a determiner present even in (7a), but that it is silent. This would allow for the possibility that Specifier of NP is obligatorily fille ...
STRESS IN RAUSA - Studies in African Linguistics
... lWork for this paper was begun while working as a Research Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Nigerian Languages, Bayero University, Kano during 1974-1976. It was completed as part of my Ph.D. dissertation [Dresel 1977], and I am particularly grateful for the help given to me by Robert Port. 2Som ...
... lWork for this paper was begun while working as a Research Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Nigerian Languages, Bayero University, Kano during 1974-1976. It was completed as part of my Ph.D. dissertation [Dresel 1977], and I am particularly grateful for the help given to me by Robert Port. 2Som ...
English Grammatical Collocations in Azeri
... Collocations, recurrent combinations of words whose co-occurrence probability is higher than chance, are frequent in natural languages. Collocation is a linguistic phenomenon worthy to be investigated in translating any text from one language into another one. Since bilingual dictionaries do not off ...
... Collocations, recurrent combinations of words whose co-occurrence probability is higher than chance, are frequent in natural languages. Collocation is a linguistic phenomenon worthy to be investigated in translating any text from one language into another one. Since bilingual dictionaries do not off ...
Prepositions and particles in English
... to grammar, choose a broader definition of prepositions, as heads of prepositional phrases with specific characteristics: We include in the preposition category all of the subordinating conjunctions of traditional grammar, with three exceptions: whether, if with the meaning ...
... to grammar, choose a broader definition of prepositions, as heads of prepositional phrases with specific characteristics: We include in the preposition category all of the subordinating conjunctions of traditional grammar, with three exceptions: whether, if with the meaning ...
Russian Holidays - Праздники
... Asking about languages When you are asking a yes/no question in Russian, there is no difference between the question and the statement, except for the question mark. When you are speaking Russian you should ask questions in a different tone. The tone of your voice should rise if you are asking a que ...
... Asking about languages When you are asking a yes/no question in Russian, there is no difference between the question and the statement, except for the question mark. When you are speaking Russian you should ask questions in a different tone. The tone of your voice should rise if you are asking a que ...
4. Modelling Lexical Resources for Slavic Languages in KPML
... when the clause it is part of is in active voice and its OBJECT is realized as a nominal group, that nominal group should be in the dative case rather than the accusative case (which would be the default case for realizing an OBJECT as nominal group with a clause in active voice). Thus, we need to o ...
... when the clause it is part of is in active voice and its OBJECT is realized as a nominal group, that nominal group should be in the dative case rather than the accusative case (which would be the default case for realizing an OBJECT as nominal group with a clause in active voice). Thus, we need to o ...
adjective clause
... There are different types of adjective clauses. In each different type, the relative pronoun has a different function. It may be a subject or an object in its own clause, it may replace a possessive word. ...
... There are different types of adjective clauses. In each different type, the relative pronoun has a different function. It may be a subject or an object in its own clause, it may replace a possessive word. ...
what is a complete sentence?
... 3. Elements joined by correlative conjunctions, such as "either . . . or" and not "only . . .but also," should be parallel. 4. Two elements that are compared or contrasted should be expressed in parallel structures. ...
... 3. Elements joined by correlative conjunctions, such as "either . . . or" and not "only . . .but also," should be parallel. 4. Two elements that are compared or contrasted should be expressed in parallel structures. ...
on finiteness - Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
... Abstract. The distinction between finite and non-finite verb forms is well-established but not particularly well-defined. It cannot just be a matter of verb morphology, because it is also made when there is hardly any morphological difference: by far most English verb forms can be finite as well as ...
... Abstract. The distinction between finite and non-finite verb forms is well-established but not particularly well-defined. It cannot just be a matter of verb morphology, because it is also made when there is hardly any morphological difference: by far most English verb forms can be finite as well as ...
Synchronized Morphological and Syntactic
... • The lexicon: provides basic and initial information about lexical items (grammatical attribute). • Adjacency constraints: specify the compatibility or the incompatibility of two neighboring morphemes. For instance: ...
... • The lexicon: provides basic and initial information about lexical items (grammatical attribute). • Adjacency constraints: specify the compatibility or the incompatibility of two neighboring morphemes. For instance: ...
VerbTenseInProgress
... They have been publishing this comic book for ten years. We have been seeing geese flying south all afternoon. Even though the coroner has been carefully examining the corpse discovered in Sutherland's Gully since early this morning, we still do not know the cause of death. ...
... They have been publishing this comic book for ten years. We have been seeing geese flying south all afternoon. Even though the coroner has been carefully examining the corpse discovered in Sutherland's Gully since early this morning, we still do not know the cause of death. ...
(2005). Some thoughts on Balto-Finnic passives and impersonals
... The preverbal position in an Estonian impersonal passive may remain empty, or be filled by various kinds of elements, including the underlying object (7c) or a locative/temporal adverbial (8c) – we will return to this in section 3. In contrast to personal passives (7b), the preverbal element in an i ...
... The preverbal position in an Estonian impersonal passive may remain empty, or be filled by various kinds of elements, including the underlying object (7c) or a locative/temporal adverbial (8c) – we will return to this in section 3. In contrast to personal passives (7b), the preverbal element in an i ...
Dual Nominalisation in Yukaghir: structural ambiguity as semantic
... modifiers (in particular, in the construction with a transitive DN-modifier). Apart from the better agreement with the overall semantics of the possessive suffix, this analysis would account for the semantic constraints on the head noun: indeed, if the possessive suffix must refer to the subject of ...
... modifiers (in particular, in the construction with a transitive DN-modifier). Apart from the better agreement with the overall semantics of the possessive suffix, this analysis would account for the semantic constraints on the head noun: indeed, if the possessive suffix must refer to the subject of ...