Restructuring Involving Purpose/ Gerundive Clause in Japanese*
... T claims that hadakade can relate only to the matrix verb itta ‘went’ in (15) and thus functions as a secondary predicate for the matrix subject Taro. In (16), it can only go with nagu(ru) ‘hit,’ so it works as a secondary predicate just for the object of the embedded verb, namely Ziro.5 Notice that ...
... T claims that hadakade can relate only to the matrix verb itta ‘went’ in (15) and thus functions as a secondary predicate for the matrix subject Taro. In (16), it can only go with nagu(ru) ‘hit,’ so it works as a secondary predicate just for the object of the embedded verb, namely Ziro.5 Notice that ...
Three Agreement Alternations in Dutch and their Interactions
... (Note that it is not possible to apply (15b) and delete [PAR] while leaving [ADD] unaffected, as this would result in an ill-formed feature geometry.) Thus, (16) can block the application of impoverishment rules.1 The principle in (16) also illuminates an apparent complication with the agreement fo ...
... (Note that it is not possible to apply (15b) and delete [PAR] while leaving [ADD] unaffected, as this would result in an ill-formed feature geometry.) Thus, (16) can block the application of impoverishment rules.1 The principle in (16) also illuminates an apparent complication with the agreement fo ...
sentence ([the, girl, sing, a, song], []).
... • We notice that there is lot of information to be specified for each noun, even when we know that every noun occupies only one element of an input list and will give rise to a small parse tree with the functor 'n'. ...
... • We notice that there is lot of information to be specified for each noun, even when we know that every noun occupies only one element of an input list and will give rise to a small parse tree with the functor 'n'. ...
Conditionals
... present simple, zero conditionals. These are the most common. They are used for things that generally happen and are always true; such as scientific truths and generalisations: ...
... present simple, zero conditionals. These are the most common. They are used for things that generally happen and are always true; such as scientific truths and generalisations: ...
person-hierarchies and the origin ofasymmetries in totonac verbal
... and Chicontla, show some variation-where relevant, these are noted in the text. While the languages of the Totonac- Tepehua family show a good deal of variation both in terms of phonology and lexicon, they are easily recognizable as a family and share a great deal of obviously cognate morphology and ...
... and Chicontla, show some variation-where relevant, these are noted in the text. While the languages of the Totonac- Tepehua family show a good deal of variation both in terms of phonology and lexicon, they are easily recognizable as a family and share a great deal of obviously cognate morphology and ...
Grammar Practice Workbook
... Write whether each sentence has a simple subject or a compound subject and a simple predicate or a compound predicate. Then underline each simple subject and simple predicate. simple subject, compound predicate 1. Did you read and understand the homework assignment? _________________________ compoun ...
... Write whether each sentence has a simple subject or a compound subject and a simple predicate or a compound predicate. Then underline each simple subject and simple predicate. simple subject, compound predicate 1. Did you read and understand the homework assignment? _________________________ compoun ...
Click to Octopodes
... Absolute phrase: A noun phrase with one modifier. The modifier is often a participial phrase following the noun headword. An absolute phrase can explain a cause or condition, as in: The temperature having dropped suddenly, we decided to build a fire in the fireplace. Or, it can add a detail or a poi ...
... Absolute phrase: A noun phrase with one modifier. The modifier is often a participial phrase following the noun headword. An absolute phrase can explain a cause or condition, as in: The temperature having dropped suddenly, we decided to build a fire in the fireplace. Or, it can add a detail or a poi ...
Grammar Practice Workbook
... Write whether each sentence has a simple subject or a compound subject and a simple predicate or a compound predicate. Then underline each simple subject and simple predicate. simple subject, compound predicate 1. Did you read and understand the homework assignment? _________________________ compoun ...
... Write whether each sentence has a simple subject or a compound subject and a simple predicate or a compound predicate. Then underline each simple subject and simple predicate. simple subject, compound predicate 1. Did you read and understand the homework assignment? _________________________ compoun ...
Douglas L. Rideout: Auxiliary Selection in 16th Century French
... generalised the use of the auxiliary avoir for all intransitive and reflexive / pronominal verbs. 4 Another area where regional variation becomes apparent is the attacks launched against certain period grammarians based on regional origins. These critiques emanate mainly from Henri and Robert Estien ...
... generalised the use of the auxiliary avoir for all intransitive and reflexive / pronominal verbs. 4 Another area where regional variation becomes apparent is the attacks launched against certain period grammarians based on regional origins. These critiques emanate mainly from Henri and Robert Estien ...
Auxiliary Selection in 16th Century French: Imposing Norms
... sometimes being cited as one language example among others. What is even more rarely addressed, and what is vitally missing in the linguistic literature, is auxiliary selection as seen from a historical perspective. Historical information on auxiliary selection is not totally nonexistent, but no com ...
... sometimes being cited as one language example among others. What is even more rarely addressed, and what is vitally missing in the linguistic literature, is auxiliary selection as seen from a historical perspective. Historical information on auxiliary selection is not totally nonexistent, but no com ...
GENITIVE: a noun is put into the genitive case if it is being used to
... All Latin nouns have 10 case forms each, but the nouns fall into 5 large classes called DECLENSIONS. All the nouns in the same Declension use the same set of endings. The declension of a noun can be determined by looking at the 2 forms provided in the vocabulary list or glossary. Look at the second ...
... All Latin nouns have 10 case forms each, but the nouns fall into 5 large classes called DECLENSIONS. All the nouns in the same Declension use the same set of endings. The declension of a noun can be determined by looking at the 2 forms provided in the vocabulary list or glossary. Look at the second ...
Part 2: Verbs: Their forms and types
... followed by a verb. However, most of these are results of the word formation process called back formation, whereby a more complex form, in this case a noun furnished with some suffix (e.g. baby-sitter), is converted to the word class of verbs, which is accompanied by the disappearance of the suffix ...
... followed by a verb. However, most of these are results of the word formation process called back formation, whereby a more complex form, in this case a noun furnished with some suffix (e.g. baby-sitter), is converted to the word class of verbs, which is accompanied by the disappearance of the suffix ...
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 ...
... • 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 ...
grammar language grammar language grammar
... TENSE of the VERB referring to time further back than a past event under discussion: “Marcus was a freedman, but once he had been a slave”. The first DEGREE of COMPARISON; in fact it is simply the ordinary adjective itself, e.g. IRATUS – angry. ...
... TENSE of the VERB referring to time further back than a past event under discussion: “Marcus was a freedman, but once he had been a slave”. The first DEGREE of COMPARISON; in fact it is simply the ordinary adjective itself, e.g. IRATUS – angry. ...
e-Version
... (the simple future). These are basic tenses for any beginning language learner. These tenses build on what you have learned about the four principal parts of a verb. Like the present tense, the future tense uses Principal Part , the base form of a verb. You might be surprised to find two present tens ...
... (the simple future). These are basic tenses for any beginning language learner. These tenses build on what you have learned about the four principal parts of a verb. Like the present tense, the future tense uses Principal Part , the base form of a verb. You might be surprised to find two present tens ...
Events, Processes, and States
... from the semantics of individual verbs, when in fact they involve fundamental linguistic categories reflected partly at the lexical level and partly -in the case of Indo-European languages, pervasively-at the morphological and syntactic level. 13 Here are three cases in point of how the failure to d ...
... from the semantics of individual verbs, when in fact they involve fundamental linguistic categories reflected partly at the lexical level and partly -in the case of Indo-European languages, pervasively-at the morphological and syntactic level. 13 Here are three cases in point of how the failure to d ...
Adjectives and Adverbs
... Note: This document should only be used as a reference and should not replace assignment guidelines. ...
... Note: This document should only be used as a reference and should not replace assignment guidelines. ...
Foreign Language - Dade Christian School
... possessive adjectives Possessive adjectives that follow nouns Possessive Pronouns Review of the verb “ser” Review of comparisions between new and old appliances ...
... possessive adjectives Possessive adjectives that follow nouns Possessive Pronouns Review of the verb “ser” Review of comparisions between new and old appliances ...
a Brazilian treebank annotated with semantic role labels
... verbs that play an auxiliary role, including temporal, modal and aspectual verbs. These verbs are modifiers of the proposition, but do not belong to the argument structure and thus do not integrate the core of the proposition. In Portuguese, these verbs occur at left of the main verb in a verbal cha ...
... verbs that play an auxiliary role, including temporal, modal and aspectual verbs. These verbs are modifiers of the proposition, but do not belong to the argument structure and thus do not integrate the core of the proposition. In Portuguese, these verbs occur at left of the main verb in a verbal cha ...
Deponent verbs in Georgian
... recours à l’actif” (Flobert 1967: xi). (Flobert’s definition takes into account the fact that certain non-finite forms of Latin deponents are constructed like those of active verbs). The above-cited definitions cannot, however, be transferred in their present form to the Georgian verbs Shanidze labe ...
... recours à l’actif” (Flobert 1967: xi). (Flobert’s definition takes into account the fact that certain non-finite forms of Latin deponents are constructed like those of active verbs). The above-cited definitions cannot, however, be transferred in their present form to the Georgian verbs Shanidze labe ...
Using Commas to Set Off Introductory Matter and Nonessential Matter
... Some of these words—for example, but, as, after—may also serve as conjunctions. But when they serve as prepositions, they lack a verb. After their pointless fight, they left the dance. Here, after is a preposition beginning a prepositional phrase. It has no verb. In contrast, when after is a conjunc ...
... Some of these words—for example, but, as, after—may also serve as conjunctions. But when they serve as prepositions, they lack a verb. After their pointless fight, they left the dance. Here, after is a preposition beginning a prepositional phrase. It has no verb. In contrast, when after is a conjunc ...
Power Point presentation
... “Look for” in (4a) denotes a relation between two entities; in (4b) it denotes a relation between an entity (the agent) and some intensional object (Montague 1973), perhaps a property as argued by Zimmermann (1993). ...
... “Look for” in (4a) denotes a relation between two entities; in (4b) it denotes a relation between an entity (the agent) and some intensional object (Montague 1973), perhaps a property as argued by Zimmermann (1993). ...
Using Verbs
... Nouns and Pronouns . . . . . . Determining the Number of Verbs . . Matching Subjects and Verbs . . . . . Making Subjects and Verbs Agree . . . Making Subjects and Verbs Agree . . . Mixed Practice: Subject and Verb Agreement . . . . . . . . Making Subjects and Verbs Agree . . . Making Subjects and Ve ...
... Nouns and Pronouns . . . . . . Determining the Number of Verbs . . Matching Subjects and Verbs . . . . . Making Subjects and Verbs Agree . . . Making Subjects and Verbs Agree . . . Mixed Practice: Subject and Verb Agreement . . . . . . . . Making Subjects and Verbs Agree . . . Making Subjects and Ve ...
Number as Person - CSSP
... Before turning to our main topic, the revision of the person/number paradigm, we need an account of the interaction of semantic and grammatical agreement. As noted above, the S EMANTIC AGREE MENT H YPOTHESIS , according to which predicate adjectives show semantic agreement, encounters a problem with ...
... Before turning to our main topic, the revision of the person/number paradigm, we need an account of the interaction of semantic and grammatical agreement. As noted above, the S EMANTIC AGREE MENT H YPOTHESIS , according to which predicate adjectives show semantic agreement, encounters a problem with ...
Name
... A complete subject includes the simple subject and any words that modify it. The driver of our bus waits patiently for the smallest children. A complete predicate includes the simple predicate and any words that modify it. The works of Monet are on display at the museum. Exercise 1: Draw a vertical ...
... A complete subject includes the simple subject and any words that modify it. The driver of our bus waits patiently for the smallest children. A complete predicate includes the simple predicate and any words that modify it. The works of Monet are on display at the museum. Exercise 1: Draw a vertical ...