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Link to - Computational Event Data System
Link to - Computational Event Data System

... TABARI is about 70-times faster than KEDS. Using an automatic coding mode that provides no screen feedback, TABARI codes 2000 events per second on a 350Mhz Macintosh G3 computer; on a 650Mhz Dell Pentium III, the speed is around 3000 events per second. Typical human coders can reliably produce abou ...
Reflexive Verbs
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... Affirmative commands are when you tell someone to do something. Regular commands are formed by conjugating in the “tú” form and dropping the “S”. Irregular commands will be ...
EXP Grammar Tutor 1 - 2
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... can be used with the verb to be to say what someone or something is like. Robert is tall. (Robert is a noun; tall is an adjective.) That pretty girl is also tall. (girl is a noun; pretty and tall are adjectives.) The teachers are funny and friendly. They are all tall as well. (teachers is a noun; fu ...
ELP STANDARDS IMPLEMENTATION GUIDE ELL Stage II: Grades 1-2 Mesa Public Schools
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Boom and Whoosh: Verbs of Explosion as a
Boom and Whoosh: Verbs of Explosion as a

... Much research has been done on various semantic verb classes, most notably on break-verbs. In this study, a new class of change-of-state verbs is proposed, namely verbs that encode an explode-event. The research presented here not only offers a new organization of certain change-of-state verbs, but ...
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Studies in African Linguistics Volume 36, Number 1, 2007
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... language also distinguishes three cases in personal pronouns. These are the subjective or nominative, objective or accusative and possessive or genitive cases. An interesting and distinguishing feature of the pronominal system, especially as regards personal pronouns, is the distinction the language ...
Adverbs and Adjectives
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ASPECTS OF NAVAJO VERB MORPHOLOGY AND SYNTAX: THE

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Common Sentence Errors
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the Persian Complex Predicate Construction
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... Persian (Farsi) has a large and open-ended set of complex predicates that consist of a non-verbal element, the host, followed by a light verb. Complex predicates (CPs) are of interest in the context of the present volume because they display a mismatch of lexical and phrasal properties: they act in ...
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... ly a rouse to redirect the topic of discussion to theology and law in terms of Aristotelian logic. However, in order aver this argument and in order to exhibit the relevance of logic for the study of grammar, the researcher will henceforth use the term ‘linguistic argumentation’ to refer to the stud ...
Morphology in Word Grammar
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Handout #2 - Pennsylvania Child Welfare Resource Center
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... The '60s were a time of great social unrest. Don't use apostrophes for personal pronouns, the relative pronoun who, or for noun plurals. Apostrophes should not be used with possessive pronouns because possessive pronouns already show possession—they don't need an apostrophe. His, her, its, my, your ...
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... they'll always have a case. A case is a special form of a word that shows what the word is doing in that particular sentence. English has three cases—nominative, possessive, and objective. (Already confused? Count your blessings. Other languages have more.) The same word will take a different case d ...
Kalasha Dictionary —with English and Urdu
Kalasha Dictionary —with English and Urdu

... In his dictionary, Turner used the work of the pioneering Norwegian linguist, Georg Morgenstierne, who in a visit in 1929 collected his initial Kalasha data. During subsequent years, Morgenstierne expanded his collection with the help of other people. In 1973, Morgenstierne’s work on Kalasha was pub ...
nominal composition, noun incorporation and non-finite
nominal composition, noun incorporation and non-finite

... (lit. ‘water-give’); Sanskrit formations with bhū ‘become’, kṛ ‘make, do’ and as ‘be’ (see examples in Section 3.1, Dravidian examples in Section 4, and Bossong 1985: 144–145; Haig 2002 for evidence from Iranian languages). Intuitively, this type of derivation does not instantiate true noun incorpor ...
Keys to the Exercises
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... B. Bright eyes (hendu = a natural pair of eyes). C. Three dead men. D. Beautiful birds. E. A queen is a mighty woman. F. The mountains are great. G. Best interpreted "a king [is] mighty", the copula being left out and understood, but it could also mean "a mighty king" with a somewhat unusual word-or ...
The Present Perfect
The Present Perfect

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bYTEBoss English Grammar Writers Error Analysis
bYTEBoss English Grammar Writers Error Analysis

... He smiled friendly at me. He smiled friendlily at me. ...
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Old English grammar

The grammar of Old English is quite different from that of Modern English, predominantly by being much more inflected. As an old Germanic language, Old English has a morphological system that is similar to that of the hypothetical Proto-Germanic reconstruction, retaining many of the inflections thought to have been common in Proto-Indo-European and also including characteristically Germanic constructions such as the umlaut.Among living languages, Old English morphology most closely resembles that of modern Icelandic, which is among the most conservative of the Germanic languages; to a lesser extent, the Old English inflectional system is similar to that of modern High German.Nouns, pronouns, adjectives and determiners were fully inflected with five grammatical cases (nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, and instrumental), two grammatical numbers (singular and plural) and three grammatical genders (masculine, feminine, and neuter). First- and second-person personal pronouns also had dual forms for referring to groups of two people, in addition to the usual singular and plural forms.The instrumental case was somewhat rare and occurred only in the masculine and neuter singular; it could typically be replaced by the dative. Adjectives, pronouns and (sometimes) participles agreed with their antecedent nouns in case, number and gender. Finite verbs agreed with their subject in person and number.Nouns came in numerous declensions (with deep parallels in Latin, Ancient Greek and Sanskrit). Verbs came in nine main conjugations (seven strong and two weak), each with numerous subtypes, as well as a few additional smaller conjugations and a handful of irregular verbs. The main difference from other ancient Indo-European languages, such as Latin, is that verbs can be conjugated in only two tenses (vs. the six ""tenses"" – really tense/aspect combinations – of Latin), and have no synthetic passive voice (although it did still exist in Gothic).The grammatical gender of a given noun does not necessarily correspond to its natural gender, even for nouns referring to people. For example, sēo sunne (the Sun) was feminine, se mōna (the Moon) was masculine, and þæt wīf ""the woman/wife"" was neuter. (Compare modern German die Sonne, der Mond, das Weib.) Pronominal usage could reflect either natural or grammatical gender, when it conflicted.
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