The Computer Project
... when mother phoned you. Example 2: I had been studying for a long time so I was feeling hot and mad. ...
... when mother phoned you. Example 2: I had been studying for a long time so I was feeling hot and mad. ...
Machine Learning of Text Analysis Rules for Clinical Records
... subtype ÒabsentÓ in sentence 2. An automated system will need rules about linguistic contexts that distinguish absent from present symptoms, rules that are specific to the writing style of hospital discharge summaries. The problem of classifying phrases becomes even more difficult when no single wor ...
... subtype ÒabsentÓ in sentence 2. An automated system will need rules about linguistic contexts that distinguish absent from present symptoms, rules that are specific to the writing style of hospital discharge summaries. The problem of classifying phrases becomes even more difficult when no single wor ...
Yamba - MPG.PuRe
... identified and given labels corresponding to the various levels and ranks of analysis. There must be implicit rules which govern the way smaller units are ...
... identified and given labels corresponding to the various levels and ranks of analysis. There must be implicit rules which govern the way smaller units are ...
Toward a balanced formal-functional grammatical description
... A lot of detail has been left out of this utterance. For example, most people have two hands, yet the sentence does not mention WHICH of "her hands" the subject is holding. In fact, if the speaker did specify "her right hand" it may be a potential distraction. The hearer may legitimately wonder why ...
... A lot of detail has been left out of this utterance. For example, most people have two hands, yet the sentence does not mention WHICH of "her hands" the subject is holding. In fact, if the speaker did specify "her right hand" it may be a potential distraction. The hearer may legitimately wonder why ...
on finiteness - Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
... number of syntactical and semantic consequences that cannot be derived from the fact that finite forms are marked for tense, person, mood and other verbal categories. Finiteness should be seen as a grammatical category in its own right. This fact is clearly manifested in language acquisition. It has ...
... number of syntactical and semantic consequences that cannot be derived from the fact that finite forms are marked for tense, person, mood and other verbal categories. Finiteness should be seen as a grammatical category in its own right. This fact is clearly manifested in language acquisition. It has ...
No one wanted to live by the smelly landfill. adjective 1. They ran
... All –ly words are not created equal! Some people see an –ly ending on a word and think that it’s an adverb. That’s because many adverbs do end in –ly. But be careful. An –ly ending can also be found on some adjectives. How do you tell the difference? An adverb often describes a verb, while an adject ...
... All –ly words are not created equal! Some people see an –ly ending on a word and think that it’s an adverb. That’s because many adverbs do end in –ly. But be careful. An –ly ending can also be found on some adjectives. How do you tell the difference? An adverb often describes a verb, while an adject ...
Nominalization in Yami*
... indicative verb forms are also used in nominalization, as has already been pointed out by others. Some have even hypothesized that these indicative verb forms were derived by nominalization. However, the relationship between nominalization and the evolution of the focus system cannot be fully unders ...
... indicative verb forms are also used in nominalization, as has already been pointed out by others. Some have even hypothesized that these indicative verb forms were derived by nominalization. However, the relationship between nominalization and the evolution of the focus system cannot be fully unders ...
verbs - Japanese Audio Lessons
... u verbs have a consonant (usually not ‘r’) before the final ‘u’; this includes words ending in ‘au’ or ‘ou,’ since these verbs are abbreviated (the ‘w’ left out); the masu form is formed by replacing ‘u’ with ‘imasu.’ Examples include kaku, kasu (kashimasu), shinu, matsu (machimasu), kiru, kau; the ...
... u verbs have a consonant (usually not ‘r’) before the final ‘u’; this includes words ending in ‘au’ or ‘ou,’ since these verbs are abbreviated (the ‘w’ left out); the masu form is formed by replacing ‘u’ with ‘imasu.’ Examples include kaku, kasu (kashimasu), shinu, matsu (machimasu), kiru, kau; the ...
FREN 1101 (Stephenson)
... Notice that the direct object ("objet direct") and object of a preposition ("objet d'une préposition") forms of these pronouns use either "est-ce que" or "inversion" [never both at the same time], but that the subject forms do not ("Qui" as subject is directly followed by a verb, and "Que" is combin ...
... Notice that the direct object ("objet direct") and object of a preposition ("objet d'une préposition") forms of these pronouns use either "est-ce que" or "inversion" [never both at the same time], but that the subject forms do not ("Qui" as subject is directly followed by a verb, and "Que" is combin ...
Les pronoms interrogatifs
... Notice that the direct object ("objet direct") and object of a preposition ("objet d'une préposition") forms of these pronouns use either "est-ce que" or "inversion" [never both at the same time], but that the subject forms do not ("Qui" as subject is directly followed by a verb, and "Que" is combin ...
... Notice that the direct object ("objet direct") and object of a preposition ("objet d'une préposition") forms of these pronouns use either "est-ce que" or "inversion" [never both at the same time], but that the subject forms do not ("Qui" as subject is directly followed by a verb, and "Que" is combin ...
a Markup Language to Describe the Unlimited
... intelligence and computer linguistics. In the past 50 years great progress has been made in this field, as a lot of references have pointed out [1][7][9]. The milestone in the history of modern linguistics is Chomsky’s concept of generative grammar for natural language with the efforts of describing ...
... intelligence and computer linguistics. In the past 50 years great progress has been made in this field, as a lot of references have pointed out [1][7][9]. The milestone in the history of modern linguistics is Chomsky’s concept of generative grammar for natural language with the efforts of describing ...
Troublesome Modifier Workshop
... object of the proposition by where it is sometimes understood and the to be verb is used with the past participle form of the verb. EX: The ball was thrown by John. (John is the actor of the sentence.) Rice is grown in India. (By someone supplies the understood actor. It is not as important as the r ...
... object of the proposition by where it is sometimes understood and the to be verb is used with the past participle form of the verb. EX: The ball was thrown by John. (John is the actor of the sentence.) Rice is grown in India. (By someone supplies the understood actor. It is not as important as the r ...
Grammar Guide
... me to avoid traffic on Main Street as I drive home. Note, too, that you do not capitalize after the semicolon (notice the word “this” is lowercase. The only exception would be if the first word in the next sentence is a proper noun or meets one of the other criteria posted in the capitalization sect ...
... me to avoid traffic on Main Street as I drive home. Note, too, that you do not capitalize after the semicolon (notice the word “this” is lowercase. The only exception would be if the first word in the next sentence is a proper noun or meets one of the other criteria posted in the capitalization sect ...
GRS LX 700 Language Acquisition and Linguistic Theory
... We have an account for why ECM subjects act like they’re in the higher clause by LF. Moreover, we have yet another reason to think that there is an LF level. So what does it mean for a verb to “assign accusative case”? ...
... We have an account for why ECM subjects act like they’re in the higher clause by LF. Moreover, we have yet another reason to think that there is an LF level. So what does it mean for a verb to “assign accusative case”? ...
Exploring Verb Frames for Sentence Simplification in Hindi
... to propose resolutions which could, in general, assist and improve the performance of the NLP systems. In general, complex sentences have more than one clause (Kachru, 2006) and these clauses are combined using connectives. In the context of dependency parsing, it has been illustrated by McDonald an ...
... to propose resolutions which could, in general, assist and improve the performance of the NLP systems. In general, complex sentences have more than one clause (Kachru, 2006) and these clauses are combined using connectives. In the context of dependency parsing, it has been illustrated by McDonald an ...
Chapter 30: The Perfect and Pluperfect Subjunctive Chapter 30
... essemus/essetis/essent. And the translation? What else? “Had been loved (S).” And that’s it. That’s all you need to know in terms of formation for this chapter, and most of it you knew before you even started this presentation. Let’s go to something you don’t know. Indirect Questions. The same way ...
... essemus/essetis/essent. And the translation? What else? “Had been loved (S).” And that’s it. That’s all you need to know in terms of formation for this chapter, and most of it you knew before you even started this presentation. Let’s go to something you don’t know. Indirect Questions. The same way ...
english syntax the simple sentence
... performance: the TG grammarians are interested not in the actual utterance of the speaker (which are a matter only of “performance”) but in what is linguistically possible, in what the speaker can say (his “competence”). The new grammar focused on two major problems: linguistic creativity and the le ...
... performance: the TG grammarians are interested not in the actual utterance of the speaker (which are a matter only of “performance”) but in what is linguistically possible, in what the speaker can say (his “competence”). The new grammar focused on two major problems: linguistic creativity and the le ...
Jonathan Edwards- "Sinners in the Hand of an Angry God"
... 8. The controversy continued, and eventually the Supreme Court was faced with deciding the issue. 9. The Court’s ...
... 8. The controversy continued, and eventually the Supreme Court was faced with deciding the issue. 9. The Court’s ...
Daily Edit Week 36 May 14-18 Language Arts Horizonte Monday
... An indirect object is really a prepositional phrase in which the preposition to or for is not stated but understood. The indirect object always comes between the verb and the direct object in the sentence. For example: She gave me a gift.---me is the indirect object, indicates WHO it was given to; s ...
... An indirect object is really a prepositional phrase in which the preposition to or for is not stated but understood. The indirect object always comes between the verb and the direct object in the sentence. For example: She gave me a gift.---me is the indirect object, indicates WHO it was given to; s ...
Contrastive Linguistics, Translation, and Parallel Corpora
... We started out by quoting James' (1980) rather rigorous definition of translation equivalence as the best tertium comparationis for contrastive analysis. After looking at grammars of the two languages and evidence from the corpus, we find that there are differences with regard to the frequency of ce ...
... We started out by quoting James' (1980) rather rigorous definition of translation equivalence as the best tertium comparationis for contrastive analysis. After looking at grammars of the two languages and evidence from the corpus, we find that there are differences with regard to the frequency of ce ...
Variable effects of morphology and frequency on inflection patterns
... 'punish.PP'), and add -iss- to the stem in certain forms (e.g. nous punissons [p¥nisø~], 'we punish'). New verbs are occasionally coined into this group (e.g., atterrir 'to land'), which also contains deadjectival verbs (mincir 'to become thin'; verdir ‘to (make/become) green’). Children occasional ...
... 'punish.PP'), and add -iss- to the stem in certain forms (e.g. nous punissons [p¥nisø~], 'we punish'). New verbs are occasionally coined into this group (e.g., atterrir 'to land'), which also contains deadjectival verbs (mincir 'to become thin'; verdir ‘to (make/become) green’). Children occasional ...
English as a Germanic Language
... The morphology of English and its Germanic relatives also differs from that of other IE languages in systematic ways. The verb system in PIE was particularly rich and complex, expressing two voices, four moods, and perhaps as many as six tenses. Aside from a few relic formations, the Germanic langua ...
... The morphology of English and its Germanic relatives also differs from that of other IE languages in systematic ways. The verb system in PIE was particularly rich and complex, expressing two voices, four moods, and perhaps as many as six tenses. Aside from a few relic formations, the Germanic langua ...
Modifiers - Binus Repository
... from an irregular verb, give. The past participles of other irregular verbs have various other forms, such as seen, bought, flung, and bred. (For the past participles of commonly used irregular verbs, see 22.11.) 3. The perfect participle, formed with having plus a past participle, describes the nou ...
... from an irregular verb, give. The past participles of other irregular verbs have various other forms, such as seen, bought, flung, and bred. (For the past participles of commonly used irregular verbs, see 22.11.) 3. The perfect participle, formed with having plus a past participle, describes the nou ...
Case-theory: a solution of the bound pronoun problem in Romance
... the object of a transitive verb will be marked either with accusative or with partitive Case. De Hoop (1992) notes that Finnish is not the only language that shows morphological realization of two different objective Cases. In Turkish direct objects optionally get an accusative Case-marker. Once aga ...
... the object of a transitive verb will be marked either with accusative or with partitive Case. De Hoop (1992) notes that Finnish is not the only language that shows morphological realization of two different objective Cases. In Turkish direct objects optionally get an accusative Case-marker. Once aga ...
this PDF file - Canadian Center of Science and Education
... complement of the upper VP head, and the direct object is at the lower [Spec, VP]; however, the direct object then moves to the Specifier of the upper VP to check its accusative case and the VP head first goes to the lower PrP head and then to the upper verb head, and finally to the upper PrP head t ...
... complement of the upper VP head, and the direct object is at the lower [Spec, VP]; however, the direct object then moves to the Specifier of the upper VP to check its accusative case and the VP head first goes to the lower PrP head and then to the upper verb head, and finally to the upper PrP head t ...
Scottish Gaelic grammar
This article describes the grammar of the Scottish Gaelic language.