• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
Aspects of the syntax of psychological verbs in Spanish A lexical
Aspects of the syntax of psychological verbs in Spanish A lexical

... (=proto-Agent property) (13) the participant has the most prominent thematic role in a second subevent (=proto-Patient property) These two properties are based on the idea that a telic event is composed of at least two subevents, one that precedes the final state or event, and the final state or eve ...
Aspects of the syntax of psychological verbs in Spanish A lexical
Aspects of the syntax of psychological verbs in Spanish A lexical

... (=proto-Agent property) (13) the participant has the most prominent thematic role in a second subevent (=proto-Patient property) These two properties are based on the idea that a telic event is composed of at least two subevents, one that precedes the final state or event, and the final state or eve ...
as a PDF
as a PDF

... 1. Introduction. All students of Spanish have no doubt been bothered at some time or other by the problem of learning where to change an e into an ie or an i in verbs of the -ir conjugation. This vowel alternation is one of the striking features of this conjugation, and takes two forms: the alternat ...
LATIN GRAMMAR REVIEW
LATIN GRAMMAR REVIEW

... thinking. or wishing. or in the indefinite 2nd-person singular of such verbs. The present and perfect tenses refer to the future. imperfect tense to the past. The negative has non. Examples: non dixerim ("I would/ could not venture to say"); freto assimilare possis ("you might compare it to a sea" - ...
edict - How to Example Code
edict - How to Example Code

... nouns [keiyoudoushi] (e.g. kirei and kantan), nouns which can be used adjectivally with the particle "no" and verbs formed by adding suru (e.g. benkyousuru). If I put entries in edict with the "na" and "suru" included, MOKE will not find a match when they are omitted or, the case of suru, inflected. ...
The Syntax of Valuation in Auxiliary–participle
The Syntax of Valuation in Auxiliary–participle

... ParPars in Frisian (cf. the obligatory head-final word order). This approach, however, cannot, as the authors note, be extended to Swedish and Norwegian. Wiklund (2005, 2007) argues that the parasitic copying relation is “top-down, syntactic, local”, and suggests that parasitic forms are transmitte ...
Killgallon participial phrases
Killgallon participial phrases

... Sometimes, the positions of participial phrases within a sentence are interchangeable: the same phrase could occur in any position – sentence opener, subject-verb split, or sentence closer. Sometimes, however, only one or two positions are acceptable. - In the following slides, you will unscramble e ...
Analyzer to Identify Phrases and the Functional Roles in Sentences
Analyzer to Identify Phrases and the Functional Roles in Sentences

... of such nouns so that they could be recognized as content words. The present system is a simple and light-weight rule-based analyzer, thus parsing texts at a high speed. It could be embedded in a large-scale system, and be employed in a mode dealing with texts such as articles in newspapers and prof ...
Gustar and similar verbs
Gustar and similar verbs

... Gustar is used to express preferences, likes, and dislikes; however, gustar means “to be pleasing,” and is constructed very differently from the English “to like.” ...
Gustar - Arlington Spanish
Gustar - Arlington Spanish

... Gustar is used to express preferences, likes, and dislikes; however, gustar means “to be pleasing,” and is constructed very differently from the English “to like.” ...
Vergil Selected - Online Grammatical Appendix - 04-05
Vergil Selected - Online Grammatical Appendix - 04-05

... a. Modern printed texts often use only one character for vocalic and consonantal u (u, v). The Romans did not employ separate characters to distinguish between the vocalic and consonantal uses of this letter. b. When followed by the letter i, as in compounds of iaciō, throw, consonantal i, although ...
A Manchu Grammar by PG von Möllendorff
A Manchu Grammar by PG von Möllendorff

... No word commences with r, nor with two or more consonants. t after a vowel and before a consonant, or at the end of a word, is written like on. To distinguish f from w, the rule is: at the beginning of a word w occurs only when followed by a or e. F before a and e has an additional stroke at the rig ...
MMM6 Proceedings - mediterranean morphology meetings
MMM6 Proceedings - mediterranean morphology meetings

... between morphology and dialectology. On the one hand, it shows that the study of dialects offers new challenges to morphology, since dialects represent an important source of morphological phenomena. Dialectal research allows us to throw light on morphological theoretical issues, and establishes rob ...
The Bamunka Noun Phrase
The Bamunka Noun Phrase

... Line 4: Free translation The second line of each example is based on the most current orthography (Blackwell, 2011) but is broken down into individual morphemes, with some spelling adjustments, as deemed necessary to reflect the analysis. Any syllable-final /ŋ/ represents nasalisation of the vowel. ...
This page is about word formation patterns and prefixes
This page is about word formation patterns and prefixes

... in the bar. They are angry with her today. 31. You shouldn’t have been so ____________ (verb / noun / adjective / adverb) last night! You hurt many people. 32. Often people who ____________ (verb / noun / adjective / adverb) other people, do not realise what they have done. 33. Metin can’t stand Nec ...
Functional and Content Words
Functional and Content Words

... "suffixes"). Of these, prefixes and lexical suffixes have word-building functions, together with the root they form the stem of the word; inflexions (grammatical suffixes) express different morphological categories. The root, according to the positional content of the term (i.e. the border-area betw ...
Reconstruction the Lexical Domain with a Single Generative
Reconstruction the Lexical Domain with a Single Generative

... inflection creates things that can’t be monomorphemic, derivation creates the same kinds of things (Ns, Vs, As) as monomorphemes already are BUT, derivation is in general just as paradigmatic, productive, and transparent as inflection, and neither derivation nor inflection can create things that cou ...
Past Perfect Progressive Tense
Past Perfect Progressive Tense

... Usually simple past tense is followed by time signal or particular time to indicate that event happen in the past, like as: 1. Yesterday 2. …..Ago 3. Last week. Last ……. 4. The other day ...
The Problematic Use of Infinitive in English
The Problematic Use of Infinitive in English

... a double reference to the subject in the sense that the subordinate clause lacks a subject and the missing subject is recoverable from the superordinate clause subject, as in : 3. Ed remembered to take his key. He adds (ibid:63-4) saying that some non-finite clauses, like finites, be assigned the sa ...
The telicity parameter revisited
The telicity parameter revisited

... Theme relation to their governing verb (‘Incremental Theme’ in the sense of Dowty 1991, based on Krifka 1986, 1989). Notice that these are precisely the conditions under which a direct object determines the telic interpretation of a VP in those cases in which the telicity of a VP is taken to be comp ...
PhD thesis - Tartu Ülikool
PhD thesis - Tartu Ülikool

... verbally, such as the English walk, run and lock. Other noteworthy results in chapter 1 include the definitions of ‘noun’, ‘verb’, ‘flexible’ and ‘word’, and the framework of the five logically possible language types (N/V/F, N/F, V/F, N/V and F – see section 1.5). Jackendoff (1999) has used the no ...
Variation In Korean Negation - S
Variation In Korean Negation - S

... type) given to twenty three native Korean speakers who came to Hawaii very recently and still speak Korean at home. The speakers ranged quite widely in age, education, and in place of language acquisition. The test instructions required each speaker to indicate the degree of grammaticality of each s ...
English Main Verbs Move Never - ScholarlyCommons
English Main Verbs Move Never - ScholarlyCommons

... Quotative Inversion is restricted to the written language. It is therefore possible (especially in light of the problems listed above) that it reflects an earlier stage of English and cannot be analyzed in purely synchronic terms. I will leave this question for future research. ...
Using Clauses as Nouns, Adjectives, and Adverbs
Using Clauses as Nouns, Adjectives, and Adverbs

... "who (m)?" or "what?". Consider the following examples: I know that Latin is no longer spoken as a native language. In the first example, the noun "Latin" acts as the direct object of the verb "know”. In the second example, the entire clause "that Latin ..." is the direct object. Where they are goin ...
fromkin-4-syntax
fromkin-4-syntax

... very different functions in the English language. For example only “*Colorless green ideas sleep furiously” is a grammatically well formed sentence, although all of the sentences demonstrate incompatabilities of certain words with other words in the same sentence. ...
< 1 ... 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 ... 547 >

Scottish Gaelic grammar



This article describes the grammar of the Scottish Gaelic language.
  • studyres.com © 2026
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report