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Unit 7 - GFF3 - Modals Part 2 Interactive
Unit 7 - GFF3 - Modals Part 2 Interactive

... B. Bob would rather eat fish verb can be repeated than tofu. between the eat “than + object.” ...
Question sentence 1
Question sentence 1

... Who, what, which mentioned above play the role of a subject, but in this case they turn into an object. Similarly, we also have equivalents in Vietnamese: ai, gì, nào. However, in English question words are placed at the beginning of the sentence. In addition, we have to use operators such as auxili ...
UNIDAD 2b NOTE TO THE STUDENT
UNIDAD 2b NOTE TO THE STUDENT

... to an English speaker, the interpreter will not need to do anything other than translate back and forth. On the other hand, the interpreter is more likely than you to notice signs of misunderstanding or doubt in the care recipient. If this happens, the interpreter will let you know that there are si ...
The Essential Handbook For Business Writing
The Essential Handbook For Business Writing

... Passive Voice: His university days are fondly remembered by him. Active Voice: She examined the files for inconsistencies. Passive Voice: The files were examined by her for inconsistencies. Active Voice: ...
Encoding information on adjectives in a lexical
Encoding information on adjectives in a lexical

... Within IWN we have reconsidered the possibility of encoding hyponymy for adjectives. By analysing data coming from machinereadable dictionaries we find subsets of adjectives which have a g e n u s + differentia definition, like nouns or verbs. That is, these adjectives seem to be organised into clas ...
Holmberg`s Generalization`
Holmberg`s Generalization`

... is introduced by Holmberg (1986) as referring to movement of both pronouns and full noun phrases. I believe that these two movements should be kept apart (cf. Zwart 1992a), and will use the terms `pronoun shift' and `clitic placement' here to refer to movement of weak pronouns. `Focus scrambling' (N ...
Printable Book
Printable Book

... dictionary lists only adjectival and adverbial meanings for "early," it can also function as a noun. Imagine a conversation in which one person says, "Which is better for you. Should we leave early or late?" A person might well respond "Early is better for me." Thus "early" can function as a subject ...
PDF file - University of Cambridge
PDF file - University of Cambridge

... As such, they represent a case of boundary reanalysis ((ii) above), and, in fact, Janda (2001: 303) refers to this type of case as ‘upgrading via reanalysis’. Examples include the English possessive clitic ’s from an earlier genitive case ending,3 the Irish firstperson-plural pronoun muid from an ea ...
Pearson Grammar with exercises
Pearson Grammar with exercises

... way they go together tell your listeners and readers something about your education and back­ ground, so you will w ant to use language that is correct and acceptable. M any o f the language issues that speakers and writers struggle with concern usage: the col­ lective conventions and preferences o ...
Nominalization – Lexical and Syntactic Aspects
Nominalization – Lexical and Syntactic Aspects

... controlled by conditions and rules of their respective language. This allows them to be underspecified, consisting only of specifications that are not predictable by general rules and principles. Thus, the lexical entries of a language are in fact the place of all and only its idiosyncratic informat ...
A Zombie Guide to Proofreading
A Zombie Guide to Proofreading

... 2. (A) Joshua found the pressure from the gas in his stomach unbearable. (B) Although he didn't want to be rude in the middle of his survival class. (C) An explosive fart erupted from his butt. 3. (A) While cleaning under his bed, Glen heard the vacuum cleaner suck up something hard and metallic. (B ...
Ilse Wegner
Ilse Wegner

... present research. Many grammatical phenomena that are introduced here may however in the future be modified or even completely reevaluated by others, especially since the study of the Hurrian language is strongly contested. A scientific grammar in the strict sense is not included in this introductio ...
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... In this paper, my focus will be on the combination of verbs and –zhe, as in (1c). Noun/adjective-zhe will not be included in my discussion. In terms of verbs, the suffix –zhe can attach to (i) a verb on the lexical level, (ii) a verb with an aspect marker, and (iii) a verb plus a resultative verb co ...
Madares Al Ghad
Madares Al Ghad

... Objective 2.2: Demonstrative adjectives (this/that/these/those) Demonstrative adjectives indicate which one of something you are talking about. In English, there are different forms of the demonstrative adjective according to the number of items and where they are located. singular plural closer thi ...
Ilse Wegner Introduction to the Hurrian Language Forward: Among
Ilse Wegner Introduction to the Hurrian Language Forward: Among

... present research. Many grammatical phenomena that are introduced here may however in the future be modified or even completely reevaluated by others, especially since the study of the Hurrian language is strongly contested. A scientific grammar in the strict sense is not included in this introductio ...
UNIVERSITY OF EDUCATION
UNIVERSITY OF EDUCATION

... Consider the phrase “I do not want nothing.” The intended meaning would be expressed as “I do not want anything” in Standard English, according to prescriptive rules. However, if there is very heavy stress on “do not” or a specific plaintive stress on “nothing,” Standard English can use the form “I ...
Stiahnuť prednášku
Stiahnuť prednášku

... b) I don’t like the students we are talking about (in one group) ADJUNCT - time adjunct - usually it’s this - that helps us to limit the scope (all the time) I wasn’t listening to some of you presentation  there might be an ambiguity a) some I was, some I wasn’t b) I wasn’t listening at all You are ...
Uses of ter- in Malay: A corpus-based study
Uses of ter- in Malay: A corpus-based study

... If one considers the three sentences from the perspective of voice, example (1b) seems to be active, whereas (1c) is passive. Even though the meaning of the notions of ‘active’ and ‘passive’ may vary depending on linguistic theories, particularly in the Austronesian languages (cf. Wouk and Ross, 200 ...
VOICE Part-of-Speech Tagging and Lemmatization Manual
VOICE Part-of-Speech Tagging and Lemmatization Manual

... tagging. Essentially, relying fully on existing English language tagging practices for VOICE would have constituted an attempt to apply a system of annotation to data it was not designed to account for. This naturally places a particular premium on interpretation. In POS tagging VOICE, we were thus ...
cisc882 Context Free
cisc882 Context Free

... • At birth of formal language theory (comp sci) and formal linguistics • Major contribution: syntax is cognitive reality • Humans able to learn languages quickly, but not all languages  universal grammar is biological • Goal of syntactic study: find universal principles and language-specific ...
Non-Finite Subordinate Clauses
Non-Finite Subordinate Clauses

... Clauses • Most non-finite clauses have no overt Subject • Under certain conditions: – Inf.: in the to-variant with initial for as subordinator For them to be so late is very unusual. – Ger.-part.: a personal pronoun Subject usually appears in accusative case, but genitives are found in relatively fo ...
A Synopsis of the Indian Tribes Within the United States East of the
A Synopsis of the Indian Tribes Within the United States East of the

... the nineteen others, ten are west of the Stony Mountains; and seven of these inhabit, south of the sixtieth degree of north latitude, the islands and the narrow tract of land contained between the Pacific Ocean and the continuation of the Californian chain of mountains, as far south as the forty-sev ...
Restructuring Involving Purpose/ Gerundive Clause in Japanese*
Restructuring Involving Purpose/ Gerundive Clause in Japanese*

... T claims that hadakade can relate only to the matrix verb itta ‘went’ in (15) and thus functions as a secondary predicate for the matrix subject Taro. In (16), it can only go with nagu(ru) ‘hit,’ so it works as a secondary predicate just for the object of the embedded verb, namely Ziro.5 Notice that ...
Full proceedings volume - Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics
Full proceedings volume - Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics

... Besides the factors listed above, there are some basic syntactic considerations that affect the possible readings; they are listed below. If all is part of the subject, it usually requires constituent negation rather than sentence negation. Sentences like (9) are considerably less frequent that phra ...
1 Introduction - an der Universität Duisburg
1 Introduction - an der Universität Duisburg

... shorthand for stating that in that language a certain marker, say an article, co-occurs with certain nouns and requires a specific form of pronoun when, for discourse reasons, a pronoun is used which is co-referential with a noun classified as ‘feminine’. Other correspondences may exist, for instanc ...
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Malay grammar

Malay grammar is the body of rules that describe the structure of expressions in the Malay language (known as Indonesian in Indonesia and Malaysian in Malaysia). This includes the structure of words, phrases, clauses and sentences.In Malay, there are four basic parts of speech: nouns, verbs, adjectives, and grammatical function words (particles). Nouns and verbs may be basic roots, but frequently they are derived from other words by means of prefixes and suffixes.
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