Constructing verb paradigms in French: adult construals and
... from the earliest stages onwards: (a) their construals of children’s class 1 verb uses, and (b) their uses of verbs from class 3, where the relevant (non-homophonous) forms share the same constructions as class 1 verb forms with the infinitive versus the past participle. Both sources of information ...
... from the earliest stages onwards: (a) their construals of children’s class 1 verb uses, and (b) their uses of verbs from class 3, where the relevant (non-homophonous) forms share the same constructions as class 1 verb forms with the infinitive versus the past participle. Both sources of information ...
0520 FRENCH (FOREIGN LANGUAGE) MARK SCHEME for the May/June 2014 series
... e.g. Il a parle = 0. Il parlé = 0. Il a parlé/parlè = 1. Il a éte = 0 Insist on accents on past participles used as adjectives, e.g. Il est (1) casse (0). Il est (1) fatigue (0). Tolerate a grave accent for an acute accent: e.g il a jouè = 1 No credit is given in cases such as ...que il or ...de Ala ...
... e.g. Il a parle = 0. Il parlé = 0. Il a parlé/parlè = 1. Il a éte = 0 Insist on accents on past participles used as adjectives, e.g. Il est (1) casse (0). Il est (1) fatigue (0). Tolerate a grave accent for an acute accent: e.g il a jouè = 1 No credit is given in cases such as ...que il or ...de Ala ...
the category of aspect
... reflect the systematic character of language); generative (language is a body of rules by means of which all the sentences can be obtained). The structure of language can be analyzed in terms of levels of representation. For any utterance there are: - a phonological level – strings of phonemes - a m ...
... reflect the systematic character of language); generative (language is a body of rules by means of which all the sentences can be obtained). The structure of language can be analyzed in terms of levels of representation. For any utterance there are: - a phonological level – strings of phonemes - a m ...
The Category of Participles
... It is possible that other adjectival positions are sensitive to the state–event distinction as well, for example secondary predicates (see Embick 2004 for discussion). To summarize, above I have shown with the help of morphological and distributional diagnostics that so called "verbal" and "adjectiv ...
... It is possible that other adjectival positions are sensitive to the state–event distinction as well, for example secondary predicates (see Embick 2004 for discussion). To summarize, above I have shown with the help of morphological and distributional diagnostics that so called "verbal" and "adjectiv ...
NLP - Words
... Saxon genitive It is obtained with the suffix –’s for singular nouns and plurals not ending in s (f.i. children’s) and with the suffix –’ for regular plurals and some nouns ending in s or z) ...
... Saxon genitive It is obtained with the suffix –’s for singular nouns and plurals not ending in s (f.i. children’s) and with the suffix –’ for regular plurals and some nouns ending in s or z) ...
Template form in prosodic morphology
... relative sonority of the last two root consonants.2 That is to say, the schwa is inserted by a phonological rule of epenthesis, sensitive to local sonority relations in a familiar way. Because the location of the schwa in the jussive is straightforwardly predictable on purely phonological grounds, i ...
... relative sonority of the last two root consonants.2 That is to say, the schwa is inserted by a phonological rule of epenthesis, sensitive to local sonority relations in a familiar way. Because the location of the schwa in the jussive is straightforwardly predictable on purely phonological grounds, i ...
Grammar: Part I - Parts of Speech
... They had already bought her present. I have never seen anything like that before. Paul can do anything. Tracy will be buying her wedding dress in New York. My dad thought that he could sell his old car for more. She might have been being chased before her car smashed into the bridge. Most students a ...
... They had already bought her present. I have never seen anything like that before. Paul can do anything. Tracy will be buying her wedding dress in New York. My dad thought that he could sell his old car for more. She might have been being chased before her car smashed into the bridge. Most students a ...
Semantic Opposition and WORDNET
... A PROLOG-based sentence parser was used to analyze the Pustejovsky examples given in (3) through (13). The parser computes both a parse tree based on event structure and the shortest W ORD N ET path for relevant configurations. An example of the output for Mary rescued the drowning man, example (11) ...
... A PROLOG-based sentence parser was used to analyze the Pustejovsky examples given in (3) through (13). The parser computes both a parse tree based on event structure and the shortest W ORD N ET path for relevant configurations. An example of the output for Mary rescued the drowning man, example (11) ...
TWO CLASSES OF DOUBLE OBJECT VERBS: THE ROLE OF
... that double object verbs split into two classes with respect to whether they permit derivational processes such as formation of adjectival passives or not. This difference correlates with a number of further morpho-syntactic differences. On the basis of the proposal that zero-derived forms do not pe ...
... that double object verbs split into two classes with respect to whether they permit derivational processes such as formation of adjectival passives or not. This difference correlates with a number of further morpho-syntactic differences. On the basis of the proposal that zero-derived forms do not pe ...
NON-FINITE VERB FORMS
... I´d rather stay at home. I saw him enter the shop. She heard me shout. (once) But if the verb make is used in the passive, it is followed by a full (to-infinitive). She made him study hard. He was made to study hard. 1.2. The to-infinitive is used: 1.2.1. after some lexical V and the V to be + adjec ...
... I´d rather stay at home. I saw him enter the shop. She heard me shout. (once) But if the verb make is used in the passive, it is followed by a full (to-infinitive). She made him study hard. He was made to study hard. 1.2. The to-infinitive is used: 1.2.1. after some lexical V and the V to be + adjec ...
Preterite/Imperfect Half-Truths
... The list that follows contains common rules of thumbfor P/I usage which are either close paraphrasesor verbatimquotes takenfromexplanationsprovidedin several of the textbooksexamined.1 1) 'The imperfectdescribesemotionalor mentalactivity." 2) "Theimperfectis used to express repeated or habitualpast ...
... The list that follows contains common rules of thumbfor P/I usage which are either close paraphrasesor verbatimquotes takenfromexplanationsprovidedin several of the textbooksexamined.1 1) 'The imperfectdescribesemotionalor mentalactivity." 2) "Theimperfectis used to express repeated or habitualpast ...
Kenstowicz-Kissebert..
... backing rule to apply. For example, the noun gwiazd-a 'nail' from *gw'ezdshows the historically derived allomorph with a in all cases of the paradigm except for the dative/locative sg. gwiezd-ie, where the -e ending has palatalized the root-final consonants, inhibiting the backing of the root vowel. ...
... backing rule to apply. For example, the noun gwiazd-a 'nail' from *gw'ezdshows the historically derived allomorph with a in all cases of the paradigm except for the dative/locative sg. gwiezd-ie, where the -e ending has palatalized the root-final consonants, inhibiting the backing of the root vowel. ...
Why begin when you can commence – Aspects of near
... This essay is a corpus study, the aim of which is to investigate the usage of two nearsynonymous verb pairs that descend from Germanic and Romance languages. The four verbs begin, commence, hate, and detest were chosen for the study. The analysis is based on occurrences of the verbs in five subcorpo ...
... This essay is a corpus study, the aim of which is to investigate the usage of two nearsynonymous verb pairs that descend from Germanic and Romance languages. The four verbs begin, commence, hate, and detest were chosen for the study. The analysis is based on occurrences of the verbs in five subcorpo ...
Contents - South Dakota State University
... Singular countable nouns are generally preceded by an article--a, an, or the, and many plural nouns have the before them. Normally no article is used when a possessive occurs before the noun. The rule is that an article and a possessive can never modify the same noun: a book or the book or Bill's bo ...
... Singular countable nouns are generally preceded by an article--a, an, or the, and many plural nouns have the before them. Normally no article is used when a possessive occurs before the noun. The rule is that an article and a possessive can never modify the same noun: a book or the book or Bill's bo ...
Developing language resources for English
... A corpus may contain texts in a single language (monolingual corpus) or text data in multiple languages (multilingual corpus). Multilingual corpora that have been specially formatted for side-by-side comparison are called aligned parallel corpora. In order to make the corpora more useful for doing l ...
... A corpus may contain texts in a single language (monolingual corpus) or text data in multiple languages (multilingual corpus). Multilingual corpora that have been specially formatted for side-by-side comparison are called aligned parallel corpora. In order to make the corpora more useful for doing l ...
Morphology and Diachrony in A Grammar of Old English and the
... There are, however, certain disadvantages to using Late rather than Early West Saxon to illustrate Old English morphology. One disadvantage is that a certain amount of historical transparency is thereby lost. The Early West Saxon diphthongs ie and ῑe have a unique status among sounds in the dialect ...
... There are, however, certain disadvantages to using Late rather than Early West Saxon to illustrate Old English morphology. One disadvantage is that a certain amount of historical transparency is thereby lost. The Early West Saxon diphthongs ie and ῑe have a unique status among sounds in the dialect ...
Redefining part-of-speech classes with distributional semantic models
... rather than ‘syntactic’ ones. But when we train a classifier, it locates exactly the features (or combinations of features) that correspond to parts of speech, and uses them subsequently. Note that during training (and subsequent testing), each word’s vector was used several times, proportional to f ...
... rather than ‘syntactic’ ones. But when we train a classifier, it locates exactly the features (or combinations of features) that correspond to parts of speech, and uses them subsequently. Note that during training (and subsequent testing), each word’s vector was used several times, proportional to f ...
Participles: Form, Use and Meaning (PartFUM)
... What is ‘adjectival’ and what is ‘verbal’ in the grammatical makeup of participles? Do these ‘verbal’ and ‘adjectival’ properties characterize a participle itself or are they (partially) conditioned by the context in which a participle appears? If we look at their distribution, participles can app ...
... What is ‘adjectival’ and what is ‘verbal’ in the grammatical makeup of participles? Do these ‘verbal’ and ‘adjectival’ properties characterize a participle itself or are they (partially) conditioned by the context in which a participle appears? If we look at their distribution, participles can app ...
subject verb concord - Directorate of Distance Education
... Fill in the blanks with correct form of the verb: 1. Two and two ……………… four. 2. Bread and butter ……………. take wholesome food. 3. Gulliver’s travels ……………. written by swift. 4. A good man and useful citizen ……………passed away. 5. Each of the boys…………………….rewarded. 6. The jury…………………divided in their opi ...
... Fill in the blanks with correct form of the verb: 1. Two and two ……………… four. 2. Bread and butter ……………. take wholesome food. 3. Gulliver’s travels ……………. written by swift. 4. A good man and useful citizen ……………passed away. 5. Each of the boys…………………….rewarded. 6. The jury…………………divided in their opi ...
Russian peripheral reciprocal markers and - CSSP
... since the absence of control, according to Dowty (1991) and Ackerman & Moore (2001) characterizes prototypical patients, and not prototypical agents. Structurally, according to Perlmutter (1976), the subject of unaccusatives at some level of representation occupies the same place as the object of tr ...
... since the absence of control, according to Dowty (1991) and Ackerman & Moore (2001) characterizes prototypical patients, and not prototypical agents. Structurally, according to Perlmutter (1976), the subject of unaccusatives at some level of representation occupies the same place as the object of tr ...