English Sentence Analysis : an Introductory Course
... Out of all the details in an event or situation, a speaker can name the following aspects: one or more participants, attributes of these participants, and information about the setting of the event or situation. First of all, the speaker names at least one person or thing and says something about hi ...
... Out of all the details in an event or situation, a speaker can name the following aspects: one or more participants, attributes of these participants, and information about the setting of the event or situation. First of all, the speaker names at least one person or thing and says something about hi ...
THE NOUN AND THE DICTIONARY IN TSHIVENDA BY SHUMANI
... nouns with regard to their treatment in non-African language dictionaries, i.e. English and Afrikaans and in African language dictionaries, i.e. Tshivenda, Xitsonga, Sepedi, Zulu, Xhosa, Setswana and Sesotho. This will help to develop a theoretical framework as to how nouns should be treated in Afri ...
... nouns with regard to their treatment in non-African language dictionaries, i.e. English and Afrikaans and in African language dictionaries, i.e. Tshivenda, Xitsonga, Sepedi, Zulu, Xhosa, Setswana and Sesotho. This will help to develop a theoretical framework as to how nouns should be treated in Afri ...
The dialect of the Mitrovica Roma
... In spite of the similarities with Gurbet dialects documented elsewhere in former Yugoslavia, none of my informants indicated this term as their ethnonym. Older informants who were born and raised in the early 1970s generally favour the religious designation Xoraxane Roma ‘Muslim Roma’, also in use ...
... In spite of the similarities with Gurbet dialects documented elsewhere in former Yugoslavia, none of my informants indicated this term as their ethnonym. Older informants who were born and raised in the early 1970s generally favour the religious designation Xoraxane Roma ‘Muslim Roma’, also in use ...
Presente de subjuntivo
... 3. It has a change of subject (‗yo‘ in the main clause, ‗tú‘ in the subordinate clause). ...
... 3. It has a change of subject (‗yo‘ in the main clause, ‗tú‘ in the subordinate clause). ...
Parent Help Booklet - Shurley Instructional Materials
... beneath, beside, between, (Slow) beyond, but, by. Preposition, Preposition 5. Almost through. Start with P and end with W. past, since, through, throughout, to, toward, under, underneath, until, up, upon, with, within, without. ...
... beneath, beside, between, (Slow) beyond, but, by. Preposition, Preposition 5. Almost through. Start with P and end with W. past, since, through, throughout, to, toward, under, underneath, until, up, upon, with, within, without. ...
english tenses
... English independently, but it can also be used effectively by students of other departments who want to improve their knowledge of English tenses. The material is broken down into carefully arranged steps, followed by questions or other tasks. - or frame- calls for a written answer. ...
... English independently, but it can also be used effectively by students of other departments who want to improve their knowledge of English tenses. The material is broken down into carefully arranged steps, followed by questions or other tasks. - or frame- calls for a written answer. ...
Constructions and Result: English Phrasal Verbs as Analyses in
... is a meaningful part of the separated construction, the non-separated construction which occurs with those verbs that do not co-occur with the separated construction represents verbs which have a different basic syntactic structure than the separable phrasal verbs. I propose that the particles found ...
... is a meaningful part of the separated construction, the non-separated construction which occurs with those verbs that do not co-occur with the separated construction represents verbs which have a different basic syntactic structure than the separable phrasal verbs. I propose that the particles found ...
Reconsidering the Dative Shift Szabóné Papp Judit
... iii) Only verbs of Anglo-Saxon origin appear in the double object construction. This claim originates in facts about the history of the English language. In Old English the order ’V-NPdat NP-acc’ was more common than the order ’V-NP-acc NP-dat’. In Middle English the case markers eroded, which resul ...
... iii) Only verbs of Anglo-Saxon origin appear in the double object construction. This claim originates in facts about the history of the English language. In Old English the order ’V-NPdat NP-acc’ was more common than the order ’V-NP-acc NP-dat’. In Middle English the case markers eroded, which resul ...
Thematic Proto-Roles and Argument Selection
... labels, not arbitrary or tree-structurally positioned NPs; and this seems to presuppose that there is not more than one Agentive (etc.) NP per clause. (This was modified later; see below.) In order for such systems to work in an account in which the roles Agent, Theme, Goal, etc., are given explicit ...
... labels, not arbitrary or tree-structurally positioned NPs; and this seems to presuppose that there is not more than one Agentive (etc.) NP per clause. (This was modified later; see below.) In order for such systems to work in an account in which the roles Agent, Theme, Goal, etc., are given explicit ...
higher lessons in english
... parts of speech, making eight independent units, will not, in the following lessons, find everything in its accustomed place. But, when it is remembered that the thread of connection unifying this work is the sentence, it will be seen that the lessons fall into their natural order of sequence. When, ...
... parts of speech, making eight independent units, will not, in the following lessons, find everything in its accustomed place. But, when it is remembered that the thread of connection unifying this work is the sentence, it will be seen that the lessons fall into their natural order of sequence. When, ...
VOICE Part-of-Speech Tagging and Lemmatization Manual
... features of spoken language. Such challenges are, amongst others, disfluencies, repetitions, re-starts, discourse markers and pauses. Additionally, tagger and tagset could not account for a number of features characteristic of our data, e.g. the input of multilingual speakers, including code-switche ...
... features of spoken language. Such challenges are, amongst others, disfluencies, repetitions, re-starts, discourse markers and pauses. Additionally, tagger and tagset could not account for a number of features characteristic of our data, e.g. the input of multilingual speakers, including code-switche ...
2 The Dative Case
... Imagine for a moment that you are playing Mad Libs, and you are asked to supply some words, so you suggest flowerpot, mud puddle, and refrigerator. Then the leader of the game reads the story: “Philanthropists are people who like to help flowerpots. Some of them are very gullible and will believe ev ...
... Imagine for a moment that you are playing Mad Libs, and you are asked to supply some words, so you suggest flowerpot, mud puddle, and refrigerator. Then the leader of the game reads the story: “Philanthropists are people who like to help flowerpots. Some of them are very gullible and will believe ev ...
ON THE PROSODIC FEATURES OF THE MODERN ENGLISH
... In a 'together', let us add, that, if need be, may counteract the linearity of the 'one-after-the-other'.12 As has already been pointed out, in none of the uses discussed above have the temporal or modal indications conveyed by the verb passed into the theme or rheme. Under special circumstances, ho ...
... In a 'together', let us add, that, if need be, may counteract the linearity of the 'one-after-the-other'.12 As has already been pointed out, in none of the uses discussed above have the temporal or modal indications conveyed by the verb passed into the theme or rheme. Under special circumstances, ho ...
English Co-reference Guidelines
... According to the guidelines written for a name-tagging task at Georgetown University, "A human reading [a text] is able to understand it using her knowledge of language as well as her knowledge of the world. To get a computer to do the same, it is helpful to prepare examples of text marked up with w ...
... According to the guidelines written for a name-tagging task at Georgetown University, "A human reading [a text] is able to understand it using her knowledge of language as well as her knowledge of the world. To get a computer to do the same, it is helpful to prepare examples of text marked up with w ...
Verb-Initial Clauses in Ancient Greek Prose
... is to say, ‘This same construction is used in sentence Y, where there is no doubt as to its meaning; we can therefore assume the same meaning in sentence X unless there is specific evidence to the contrary.’ This difficulty is not at all peculiar to the study of information structure, though it is e ...
... is to say, ‘This same construction is used in sentence Y, where there is no doubt as to its meaning; we can therefore assume the same meaning in sentence X unless there is specific evidence to the contrary.’ This difficulty is not at all peculiar to the study of information structure, though it is e ...
Definition - KhmerDocs
... which is used to show that the subject does something for himself or to emphasize the role of subject or object. Ex- He killed himself. Ex- I myself shot the tiger yesterday. LAY SENGHOR ...
... which is used to show that the subject does something for himself or to emphasize the role of subject or object. Ex- He killed himself. Ex- I myself shot the tiger yesterday. LAY SENGHOR ...
On the Semantics of the Perfective Aspect
... Clearly, the action done as part of an accomplishment may either be performed all the way or stopped at any point. In a language such as English, the use of a simple verb (SV) by default indicates that the natural endpoint is reached, but an additional description is required to state that the actio ...
... Clearly, the action done as part of an accomplishment may either be performed all the way or stopped at any point. In a language such as English, the use of a simple verb (SV) by default indicates that the natural endpoint is reached, but an additional description is required to state that the actio ...
Investigating Problems Pertaining to Concord as Encountered by the
... than one of these combined) between two or more grammatical items in a sentence. Quirk et al (1985:755) define concord (also termed 'agreement') as "the relationship between two grammatical units such that one of them displays a particular feature (e.g. plurality) that accords with displayed or (sem ...
... than one of these combined) between two or more grammatical items in a sentence. Quirk et al (1985:755) define concord (also termed 'agreement') as "the relationship between two grammatical units such that one of them displays a particular feature (e.g. plurality) that accords with displayed or (sem ...
Serbo-Croatian Word Order - coli.uni
... List of Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
... List of Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...
THE EPP, NOMINATIVE CASE and EXPLETIVES
... is to satisfy the EPP, while the nominative Case-feature of I is checked by the postverbal NP via Agree, invalidating the analysis of Belletti (1988), according to which, the Case of this NP is partitive. A comparison of there-constructions with their non-agreeing counterparts in French and Russian ...
... is to satisfy the EPP, while the nominative Case-feature of I is checked by the postverbal NP via Agree, invalidating the analysis of Belletti (1988), according to which, the Case of this NP is partitive. A comparison of there-constructions with their non-agreeing counterparts in French and Russian ...
automatic prosodic sentence analysis, accentuation and phrasing
... identified. This word (group) establishes a Predicate constituent, which should correspond to a separate Phi domain (Gee and Grosjean 1983). In Dutch, this Phi domain may separate the subject and object arguments of the predicate. Likewise, subordinate sentences must be identified, because they usua ...
... identified. This word (group) establishes a Predicate constituent, which should correspond to a separate Phi domain (Gee and Grosjean 1983). In Dutch, this Phi domain may separate the subject and object arguments of the predicate. Likewise, subordinate sentences must be identified, because they usua ...
Dagny Taggart`s Ultimate Guide to GMAT Preparation
... math you’ll be able to say, “I need more work in probability, more work in stamina or more work in seeing various forms of misplaced modifiers in sentence correction questions. One thing is for sure, most people find that 50% or more of the reason why they get a question wrong is due to carelessness ...
... math you’ll be able to say, “I need more work in probability, more work in stamina or more work in seeing various forms of misplaced modifiers in sentence correction questions. One thing is for sure, most people find that 50% or more of the reason why they get a question wrong is due to carelessness ...
The 3 Independent Uses of the Subjunctive
... just beginning, or none of these? Aspect answers that question! Most languages have no clear way of indicating aspect but hint at it through their uses of tenses, adverbs, and various other grammatical constructions. Our main concern for the Subjunctive is that the PERFECT tense has SIMPLE A ...
... just beginning, or none of these? Aspect answers that question! Most languages have no clear way of indicating aspect but hint at it through their uses of tenses, adverbs, and various other grammatical constructions. Our main concern for the Subjunctive is that the PERFECT tense has SIMPLE A ...
Practice sheets, for the sentences in this booklet, are available in a
... To find an adverb: Go, Ask, Get. Where do I go? To a verb, adjective, or another adverb. What do I ask? How? When? Where? Why? Under What Condition? and To What Degree? What do I get? An ADVERB! (Clap) That's what! ...
... To find an adverb: Go, Ask, Get. Where do I go? To a verb, adjective, or another adverb. What do I ask? How? When? Where? Why? Under What Condition? and To What Degree? What do I get? An ADVERB! (Clap) That's what! ...
Ineffability in Grammar
... than in syntax, because phonology has developed a stable view of what counts as an input. For syntax, the makeup of inputs is much less clear, and this has consequences for the potential scope of ineffability. Consider (6a) in this respect. At first glance (6a) does not seem to constitute an instanc ...
... than in syntax, because phonology has developed a stable view of what counts as an input. For syntax, the makeup of inputs is much less clear, and this has consequences for the potential scope of ineffability. Consider (6a) in this respect. At first glance (6a) does not seem to constitute an instanc ...