
Swarthmore College Writing Center
... specify which one of them he’s referring to. Setting the title off with commas would suggest that it could be removed without changing the meaning of the sentence; however, the title is essential for meaning. For the same reason, restrictive clauses are not set off from the rest of the sentence by c ...
... specify which one of them he’s referring to. Setting the title off with commas would suggest that it could be removed without changing the meaning of the sentence; however, the title is essential for meaning. For the same reason, restrictive clauses are not set off from the rest of the sentence by c ...
Comma Power Point
... The people who work in my office are so uptight! S essential phrase V Without the essential phrase, this sentence does not make complete sense : The people are so uptight! Purdue University Writing Lab ...
... The people who work in my office are so uptight! S essential phrase V Without the essential phrase, this sentence does not make complete sense : The people are so uptight! Purdue University Writing Lab ...
A sentence with two or more independent clauses and one or more
... Definition of compound subject: two or more subjects in a single clause. Example of compound subject: Raoul and Paul play ball. Definition of compound verb: two or more verbs in a single clause. Example of compound verb: Raoul and Paul play ball and eat Skittles. ...
... Definition of compound subject: two or more subjects in a single clause. Example of compound subject: Raoul and Paul play ball. Definition of compound verb: two or more verbs in a single clause. Example of compound verb: Raoul and Paul play ball and eat Skittles. ...
Cognitive Development in Infancy
... using a single scheme. However, in Substage 4, infants begin to use more calculated approaches to producing events. They employ goal-directed behavior, in which several schemes are combined and coor ...
... using a single scheme. However, in Substage 4, infants begin to use more calculated approaches to producing events. They employ goal-directed behavior, in which several schemes are combined and coor ...
semantic macros - Computational Linguistics and Phonetics
... A Nice Implementation What is a nice implementation? It should be: – Scalable: If it works with five examples, upgrading to 5000 shouldn’t be a great problem (e.g. new constructions in the grammar, more words...) – Re-usable: Small changes in our ideas about the system shouldn’t lead to complex cha ...
... A Nice Implementation What is a nice implementation? It should be: – Scalable: If it works with five examples, upgrading to 5000 shouldn’t be a great problem (e.g. new constructions in the grammar, more words...) – Re-usable: Small changes in our ideas about the system shouldn’t lead to complex cha ...
AP English 12 - Ms Hogue`s Online English Resources
... Loose sentence: the sentence reveals the key information right away and unfolds loosely after that. Ex: Due to snowy conditions, the principal announced an early release, and students were jubilant, high-fiving, shouting about sleds and video games, wishing the clock would go faster. ...
... Loose sentence: the sentence reveals the key information right away and unfolds loosely after that. Ex: Due to snowy conditions, the principal announced an early release, and students were jubilant, high-fiving, shouting about sleds and video games, wishing the clock would go faster. ...
Argument structure: Realising semantic participants in
... EXPERIENCER: entity which experiences an emotion or other psychological state. The entity triggering this response is called a theme or stimulus: (12) BasilEXPERIENCER likes the musicTHEME. INSTRUMENT: the means by which an action is performed: (13) I wiped the table with a ragINSTRUMENT. GOAL/SOURC ...
... EXPERIENCER: entity which experiences an emotion or other psychological state. The entity triggering this response is called a theme or stimulus: (12) BasilEXPERIENCER likes the musicTHEME. INSTRUMENT: the means by which an action is performed: (13) I wiped the table with a ragINSTRUMENT. GOAL/SOURC ...
Lexical Gaps - Maarten Janssen
... not always well established. This article will first present a brief overview of the different types of lexical gaps and then discuss some linguistic issues related to lexical gaps. 2. A Topology of Lexical Gaps The study of lexical gaps starts with the work by Chomsky (1965) and Chomsky & Halle (19 ...
... not always well established. This article will first present a brief overview of the different types of lexical gaps and then discuss some linguistic issues related to lexical gaps. 2. A Topology of Lexical Gaps The study of lexical gaps starts with the work by Chomsky (1965) and Chomsky & Halle (19 ...
Perfect Readings in Russian - Seminar für Sprachwissenschaft
... The AGENT is the head of the VoiceP. The morpheme expresses the meaning that the ‘referential’ argument x of that relation is the agent of an event instantiated by the selected VP. For causative verbs, the meaning of the agent relation can be formulated as follows: (11) AGENT = R Dv(vt)s Dv.e ...
... The AGENT is the head of the VoiceP. The morpheme expresses the meaning that the ‘referential’ argument x of that relation is the agent of an event instantiated by the selected VP. For causative verbs, the meaning of the agent relation can be formulated as follows: (11) AGENT = R Dv(vt)s Dv.e ...
āgārjuna’s Logic N 8 8.1 N
... premises X can never be designated. It follows that every valuation according to which X is designated (there are none) will be one where a conclusion A is designated. Thus, it turns out that every argument from nonempty X to A is valid. Xν |= e A for all A and nonempty X. ...
... premises X can never be designated. It follows that every valuation according to which X is designated (there are none) will be one where a conclusion A is designated. Thus, it turns out that every argument from nonempty X to A is valid. Xν |= e A for all A and nonempty X. ...
english grammar - Seminar für Sprachwissenschaft
... The AGENT is the head of the VoiceP. The morpheme expresses the meaning that the ‘referential’ argument x of that relation is the agent of an event instantiated by the selected VP. For causative verbs, the meaning of the agent relation can be formulated as follows: (11) AGENT = R Dv(vt)s Dv.e ...
... The AGENT is the head of the VoiceP. The morpheme expresses the meaning that the ‘referential’ argument x of that relation is the agent of an event instantiated by the selected VP. For causative verbs, the meaning of the agent relation can be formulated as follows: (11) AGENT = R Dv(vt)s Dv.e ...
Pre Test Excerpt
... (http://www.gutenberg.org/). Specifically, we used the bulk of the English language literary works available through the project‟s website. This resulted in a corpus of 4034 separate documents consisting of over 290 million words. Infomap analyzed this corpus using default settings (a co-occurrence ...
... (http://www.gutenberg.org/). Specifically, we used the bulk of the English language literary works available through the project‟s website. This resulted in a corpus of 4034 separate documents consisting of over 290 million words. Infomap analyzed this corpus using default settings (a co-occurrence ...
Phonaesthemes: A Corpus-Based Analysis Katya Otis () Eyal Sagi ()
... (http://www.gutenberg.org/). Specifically, we used the bulk of the English language literary works available through the project‟s website. This resulted in a corpus of 4034 separate documents consisting of over 290 million words. Infomap analyzed this corpus using default settings (a co-occurrence ...
... (http://www.gutenberg.org/). Specifically, we used the bulk of the English language literary works available through the project‟s website. This resulted in a corpus of 4034 separate documents consisting of over 290 million words. Infomap analyzed this corpus using default settings (a co-occurrence ...
document
... The meaning of [[rideV horsesN]V fastA]V is the following instruction: CONJOIN[execute:SEM([rideV horsesN]V), execute:SEM(fastA)] Executing this instruction yields a concept like RIDE(_) & [THEME(_, _) & HORSES(_)] & FAST(_) The meaning of [[rideV [fastA horsesN]N]V is the following instruction: CO ...
... The meaning of [[rideV horsesN]V fastA]V is the following instruction: CONJOIN[execute:SEM([rideV horsesN]V), execute:SEM(fastA)] Executing this instruction yields a concept like RIDE(_) & [THEME(_, _) & HORSES(_)] & FAST(_) The meaning of [[rideV [fastA horsesN]N]V is the following instruction: CO ...
Coercion on the edge - Repositorio Académico
... i.e. to run does not have a predetermined end on its own, while to run a marathon does. This goes along with the well-known principle of compositionality, present in linguistics since a long time, described by Frege in 1892 and used to explain how it is that humans can create and understand new ling ...
... i.e. to run does not have a predetermined end on its own, while to run a marathon does. This goes along with the well-known principle of compositionality, present in linguistics since a long time, described by Frege in 1892 and used to explain how it is that humans can create and understand new ling ...
20 UNIT Sentence
... recording was of his special commands. If the zoo-keepers used the commands, they would have no trouble with Shanthi. This was according to Sam. However, the young elephant turned out to be quite a handful. This is in spite of Sam’s assurances. She probably misbehaves to get special attention. She w ...
... recording was of his special commands. If the zoo-keepers used the commands, they would have no trouble with Shanthi. This was according to Sam. However, the young elephant turned out to be quite a handful. This is in spite of Sam’s assurances. She probably misbehaves to get special attention. She w ...
Bi-Lexical Rules for Multi-Lexeme Translation in Lexicalist MT 1
... 9 . john1( ) & love1( ) & mary1( ), but since quantication and scope will be ignored they will be omitted from our examples; furthermore, coordination will be assumed between predicates unless otherwise stated. Before transfer, a process similar to skolemization is applied to the transfer represent ...
... 9 . john1( ) & love1( ) & mary1( ), but since quantication and scope will be ignored they will be omitted from our examples; furthermore, coordination will be assumed between predicates unless otherwise stated. Before transfer, a process similar to skolemization is applied to the transfer represent ...
1. The word as the basic unit of the language. The size-of
... The size of unit problem makes us investigate the size of the border line between a word and a word combination in speech N1 is a word, N2 is a word combination. To prove that we have to use the criterion of single and separate grammatical framing. N1 and N2 are different in the grammatical framing. ...
... The size of unit problem makes us investigate the size of the border line between a word and a word combination in speech N1 is a word, N2 is a word combination. To prove that we have to use the criterion of single and separate grammatical framing. N1 and N2 are different in the grammatical framing. ...
Syntactic frame and verb bias in aphasia: Plausibility judgments of
... frames for which grammatical sentences could be created; a few verbs could be used in all four frames, but most were usable in only two or three. For example, for the verb slip, our sentences included The thief slipped the jewelry into the pocket and The jewelry slipped out of the thief’s pocket. An ...
... frames for which grammatical sentences could be created; a few verbs could be used in all four frames, but most were usable in only two or three. For example, for the verb slip, our sentences included The thief slipped the jewelry into the pocket and The jewelry slipped out of the thief’s pocket. An ...
50. Verbal mood - Semantics Archive
... 1. Notional mood Philosophers and linguists sometimes speak of categories of meaning which bear some intuitive connection to the meanings associated with verbal mood, for example propositions which are taken to be necessary, possible, desired, and so forth. These can be described as “notional moods” ...
... 1. Notional mood Philosophers and linguists sometimes speak of categories of meaning which bear some intuitive connection to the meanings associated with verbal mood, for example propositions which are taken to be necessary, possible, desired, and so forth. These can be described as “notional moods” ...
The Meaning of Syntactic Dependencies
... restrictions. The main contribution of the paper is to describe how these restrictions can be used to simulate the process of linguistic disambiguation. We call Optional Co-Composition the disambiguation strategy relying on such restrictions. Dependencies will be put at the centre of the disambiguat ...
... restrictions. The main contribution of the paper is to describe how these restrictions can be used to simulate the process of linguistic disambiguation. We call Optional Co-Composition the disambiguation strategy relying on such restrictions. Dependencies will be put at the centre of the disambiguat ...
Syntax
... The asterisk in front of *”Colorless green ideas sleep furiously” means that the grammar doesn’t generate this sentence. It should not occur in English. Ironically, this “non-occuring” sentence is the sentence most likely to occur in many linguistics classrooms. Furthermore, it’s very poetic. ...
... The asterisk in front of *”Colorless green ideas sleep furiously” means that the grammar doesn’t generate this sentence. It should not occur in English. Ironically, this “non-occuring” sentence is the sentence most likely to occur in many linguistics classrooms. Furthermore, it’s very poetic. ...
Simple Sentence
... about the total functioning and use of words in a language, but just not what is ordinarily understood to be their meanings and what is rightly expected from the entries in a dictionary, for which information such traditional terms as reference and denotation, and more modern systems of analysis suc ...
... about the total functioning and use of words in a language, but just not what is ordinarily understood to be their meanings and what is rightly expected from the entries in a dictionary, for which information such traditional terms as reference and denotation, and more modern systems of analysis suc ...
Enhanced English Universal Dependencies
... implicit relations between content words more explicit by adding relations and augmenting relation names. In the development of this representation, we adhered to the guidelines by Nivre et al. (2016) which state that an enhanced dependency graph may only contain additional dependencies or introduce ...
... implicit relations between content words more explicit by adding relations and augmenting relation names. In the development of this representation, we adhered to the guidelines by Nivre et al. (2016) which state that an enhanced dependency graph may only contain additional dependencies or introduce ...
Big Data Approaches to Study Discourse Processes
... Surface Level NLP Tools and Databases The practice of counting and analyzing verbal sequences may seem a distinctly modern pursuit. In fact, its origins are ancient. Yule (1944) cites the practice of the Masoretes, Jewish scholars and scribes of classical antiquity, who were tasked with preserving s ...
... Surface Level NLP Tools and Databases The practice of counting and analyzing verbal sequences may seem a distinctly modern pursuit. In fact, its origins are ancient. Yule (1944) cites the practice of the Masoretes, Jewish scholars and scribes of classical antiquity, who were tasked with preserving s ...