untangling the russian predicate agreement
... (2003) propose a theory of agreement based on the distinction between CONCORD and INDEX agreement (Wechsler and Zlatic 2000, 2003; King and Dalrymple 2004). An agreement trigger such as a noun or pronoun carries both CONCORD and INDEX agreement feature sets, which are understood as grammaticalizatio ...
... (2003) propose a theory of agreement based on the distinction between CONCORD and INDEX agreement (Wechsler and Zlatic 2000, 2003; King and Dalrymple 2004). An agreement trigger such as a noun or pronoun carries both CONCORD and INDEX agreement feature sets, which are understood as grammaticalizatio ...
The Land of the Free and The Elements of Style
... before Strunk was born (and possibly read to him when he was a child) contains 19 occurrences of however that are followed by a comma, and every single one begins its clause. That is not because Lewis Carroll was wrong about English; it is because Strunk and White are wrong about English. Again, of ...
... before Strunk was born (and possibly read to him when he was a child) contains 19 occurrences of however that are followed by a comma, and every single one begins its clause. That is not because Lewis Carroll was wrong about English; it is because Strunk and White are wrong about English. Again, of ...
Get-passives, Raising, and Control
... be eventive are given by Alexiadou (2005). The first is that there are some doubleobject verbs which freely allow externalization of either goal or theme in a verbal passive (25), but do not allow goal externalization with the adjectival participle (26). She notes that if the participle in a get-pas ...
... be eventive are given by Alexiadou (2005). The first is that there are some doubleobject verbs which freely allow externalization of either goal or theme in a verbal passive (25), but do not allow goal externalization with the adjectival participle (26). She notes that if the participle in a get-pas ...
Case, 20 Years Later* Yen-hui Audrey Li
... a clause, bearing a close relation to Tense (or Agreement) and an accusative case-marked phrase is generally the object of a verb, bearing a close relation to the verb. Therefore, nominative and accusative cases are good clues to grammatical relations and the structural positions occupied by subject ...
... a clause, bearing a close relation to Tense (or Agreement) and an accusative case-marked phrase is generally the object of a verb, bearing a close relation to the verb. Therefore, nominative and accusative cases are good clues to grammatical relations and the structural positions occupied by subject ...
cisc882 Context Free
... • Choose constituents so each one has one non-bracketed word: the head • Group words by distribution of constituents they head (part-ofspeech, POS): – Noun (N), verb (V), adjective (Adj), adverb (Adv), determiner (Det) ...
... • Choose constituents so each one has one non-bracketed word: the head • Group words by distribution of constituents they head (part-ofspeech, POS): – Noun (N), verb (V), adjective (Adj), adverb (Adv), determiner (Det) ...
Danish: An Essential Grammar
... explained in a separate glossary of ‘Linguistic Terms’ at the end. The various tables and diagrams are intended to make the book easy to use; in many cases it will be possible for the learner to predict word forms and clause patterns from just a few rules. The ‘Index’ contains paragraph references b ...
... explained in a separate glossary of ‘Linguistic Terms’ at the end. The various tables and diagrams are intended to make the book easy to use; in many cases it will be possible for the learner to predict word forms and clause patterns from just a few rules. The ‘Index’ contains paragraph references b ...
3. - DROPS
... The current syntactic exercises in REAP.PT [12] are the ‘Choice of mood in subordinate clauses’ exercise and the ‘Nominal Determinants’ exercise. The ‘Choice of mood in subordinate clauses’ exercise aims to teach the syntactic restrictions imposed by the subordinative conjunctions on the mode of the ...
... The current syntactic exercises in REAP.PT [12] are the ‘Choice of mood in subordinate clauses’ exercise and the ‘Nominal Determinants’ exercise. The ‘Choice of mood in subordinate clauses’ exercise aims to teach the syntactic restrictions imposed by the subordinative conjunctions on the mode of the ...
2 X-bar Syntax
... in Introduction to Linguistics I and II. The colloquium rather aims to give an overview than to dwell on technicalities. It will also discuss some fundamental problems of any grammar theory and highlight similarities and differences to other approaches. Chomsky’s theories about language knowledge an ...
... in Introduction to Linguistics I and II. The colloquium rather aims to give an overview than to dwell on technicalities. It will also discuss some fundamental problems of any grammar theory and highlight similarities and differences to other approaches. Chomsky’s theories about language knowledge an ...
The Printable KISS Grammar Workbooks
... 10. "It matters a good deal to me," said Alice hastily; "but I'm not looking for eggs, as it happens, and if I was, I shouldn't want yours -- I don't like them raw." ...
... 10. "It matters a good deal to me," said Alice hastily; "but I'm not looking for eggs, as it happens, and if I was, I shouldn't want yours -- I don't like them raw." ...
Case and Agreement in Polish Predicates
... above for the former possibility),5 if it bears case at all (in (14) it does not). ...
... above for the former possibility),5 if it bears case at all (in (14) it does not). ...
The Double-O Constraints in Japanese* William J. Poser
... The Double-O Constraint (Harada 1973), is intended to account for the ungrammaticality of clauses containing two accusative Noun Phrases. It has been discussed by numerous authors in various formulations. This paper attempts to clarify the phenomena involved and to reduce the class of possible analy ...
... The Double-O Constraint (Harada 1973), is intended to account for the ungrammaticality of clauses containing two accusative Noun Phrases. It has been discussed by numerous authors in various formulations. This paper attempts to clarify the phenomena involved and to reduce the class of possible analy ...
MOVEMENT TRIGGERS AND THE ETIOLOGY OF
... treated as a postposition, which is unique among all the prepositions in the language (cf. Haspelmath, 1997). Two hints for the adpositional nature of fa are the following: (i) Italian uses the preposition fra/tra (“in, “between”) (e.g. Gianni partirà fra tre settimane, Gianni will leave in three we ...
... treated as a postposition, which is unique among all the prepositions in the language (cf. Haspelmath, 1997). Two hints for the adpositional nature of fa are the following: (i) Italian uses the preposition fra/tra (“in, “between”) (e.g. Gianni partirà fra tre settimane, Gianni will leave in three we ...
Unit 4 Effective Sentences PowerPoint
... A clause is a group of words with its own subject and verb. Clause like phrases, are the building blocks of sentences. Unlike phrases, however, clauses do contain a subject and verb. There are two basic types of clauses, which have an important difference between ...
... A clause is a group of words with its own subject and verb. Clause like phrases, are the building blocks of sentences. Unlike phrases, however, clauses do contain a subject and verb. There are two basic types of clauses, which have an important difference between ...
Year 1-6 Spellings From the Curriculum
... attention to GPCs that do and do not fit in with what has been taught so far. Increasingly, however, pupils also need to understand the role of morphology and etymology. Although particular GPCs in root words simply have to be learnt, teachers can help pupils to understand relationships between mean ...
... attention to GPCs that do and do not fit in with what has been taught so far. Increasingly, however, pupils also need to understand the role of morphology and etymology. Although particular GPCs in root words simply have to be learnt, teachers can help pupils to understand relationships between mean ...
Case marking in infinitive (ad- form) clauses in Old Georgian1
... Non-finite forms in Modern Georgian include participles and masdars (verbnouns). Participles are declined as nouns, are formed from the finite forms of the verb, and usually they have the same functions as adjectives. Masdars are also case marked like nouns, but are formed from the finite forms of t ...
... Non-finite forms in Modern Georgian include participles and masdars (verbnouns). Participles are declined as nouns, are formed from the finite forms of the verb, and usually they have the same functions as adjectives. Masdars are also case marked like nouns, but are formed from the finite forms of t ...
Kraken LATIN 1
... high age group—enjoy tales told in traditional norms (“Once upon a time there were three sons . . .“) with bizarre or random elements (thus my usage of camels, goats, etc.). Your job as the teacher is to make the Latin language come alive for your students; if they do not love it as you do (brace yo ...
... high age group—enjoy tales told in traditional norms (“Once upon a time there were three sons . . .“) with bizarre or random elements (thus my usage of camels, goats, etc.). Your job as the teacher is to make the Latin language come alive for your students; if they do not love it as you do (brace yo ...
go¤jš, vGJjš k‰W« mo¥gil fâj brašghLfis nk«gL¤Jtj‰fhd gæ‰Á f£lf
... Compound words are the combination of two words with different meaning and give a new word with a new meaning. Example: dining table, bath room, bed room, compound wall, kitchen ware, iron hand. Activity: Match the following: sea ...
... Compound words are the combination of two words with different meaning and give a new word with a new meaning. Example: dining table, bath room, bed room, compound wall, kitchen ware, iron hand. Activity: Match the following: sea ...
Кузнецова Н. Б. Английский язык практическая грамматика
... e.g. John and Helen’s house. (The house belongs to both of them) • We use ‘s after each name to show individual possession e.g. Mary’s and Diana’s bags. (Each girl has her own bag) 2. with of for inanimate things • of + inanimate thing or abstract noun e.g. the windows of the house the cost of livin ...
... e.g. John and Helen’s house. (The house belongs to both of them) • We use ‘s after each name to show individual possession e.g. Mary’s and Diana’s bags. (Each girl has her own bag) 2. with of for inanimate things • of + inanimate thing or abstract noun e.g. the windows of the house the cost of livin ...
Infinitive Construct
... לִ ְׁשמֹר. ¶ With preposition ( לlamed), in which case making the Infinitive Construct functions like the English infinitive, a wide range of meanings, such as purpose or result clause could be formed. This is its most frequent use in Modern Hebrew. ¶ Temporal clause could be formed by attaching ...
... לִ ְׁשמֹר. ¶ With preposition ( לlamed), in which case making the Infinitive Construct functions like the English infinitive, a wide range of meanings, such as purpose or result clause could be formed. This is its most frequent use in Modern Hebrew. ¶ Temporal clause could be formed by attaching ...
An Automatic Procedure for Topic
... The dichotomy of topic and focus, based, in the Praguean Functional Generative Description, on the scale of communicative dynamism, is relevant not only for a possible placement of the sentence in a context, but also for its semantic interpretation. An automatic identification of topic and focus may ...
... The dichotomy of topic and focus, based, in the Praguean Functional Generative Description, on the scale of communicative dynamism, is relevant not only for a possible placement of the sentence in a context, but also for its semantic interpretation. An automatic identification of topic and focus may ...
THE USE OF ADJECTIVE CLAUSE IN ENGLISH SENTENCES ASIH
... slightly, if at all, and that it is they who are still running many of the rackets on the mean streets of Grotavia. The clause who are still running many of the rackets on the mean streets of Grotavia is an adjective clause. It functions like an adjective, that is to modify a pronoun. The function o ...
... slightly, if at all, and that it is they who are still running many of the rackets on the mean streets of Grotavia. The clause who are still running many of the rackets on the mean streets of Grotavia is an adjective clause. It functions like an adjective, that is to modify a pronoun. The function o ...
W16-2115 - Association for Computational Linguistics
... Parsed Corpus of Middle English (Kroch and Taylor, 2000), the Tycho Brahe Parsed Corpus of Historical Portuguese (Galves and Britto, 2002), or the Welsh Prose corpus (Thomas et al., 2007) and for non-Indo-European languages as well, such as the Old Hungarian Corpus (Simon, 2014). Historical corpora ...
... Parsed Corpus of Middle English (Kroch and Taylor, 2000), the Tycho Brahe Parsed Corpus of Historical Portuguese (Galves and Britto, 2002), or the Welsh Prose corpus (Thomas et al., 2007) and for non-Indo-European languages as well, such as the Old Hungarian Corpus (Simon, 2014). Historical corpora ...
Design Principles for a Spanish Treebank
... It should be mentioned that compounds are annotated with the same tagset as the non-compounds, and that we do not consider any tag for each of the parts4 . 2. Inter-categorial ambiguity. It mainly concerns differences between determiners and pronouns, and between nouns and adjectives, because these ...
... It should be mentioned that compounds are annotated with the same tagset as the non-compounds, and that we do not consider any tag for each of the parts4 . 2. Inter-categorial ambiguity. It mainly concerns differences between determiners and pronouns, and between nouns and adjectives, because these ...
Analysis on the Semantics of Word Trip
... 2. The Meanings of Word “Trip” 2.1 Grammatical Meaning Grammatical meaning refers to that part of the meaning of the word which indicates grammatical concept or relationship such as part of speech of words (noun, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs), singular and plural meaning of ...
... 2. The Meanings of Word “Trip” 2.1 Grammatical Meaning Grammatical meaning refers to that part of the meaning of the word which indicates grammatical concept or relationship such as part of speech of words (noun, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs), singular and plural meaning of ...