File - Gwen Holladay
... Typical exceptions to beginning steps with action verbs are conditional statements and permissive steps (i.e., using may). For more information about conditional statements, refer to Section 6.5. Word your steps in the positive by stating what to do rather than what not to do. When negative statemen ...
... Typical exceptions to beginning steps with action verbs are conditional statements and permissive steps (i.e., using may). For more information about conditional statements, refer to Section 6.5. Word your steps in the positive by stating what to do rather than what not to do. When negative statemen ...
word classes and part-of-speech tagging
... Prepositions occur before noun phrases; semantically they are relational, often indicating spatial or temporal relations, whether literal (on it, before then, by the house) or metaphorical (on time, with gusto, beside herself). But they often indicate other relations as well (Hamlet was written by S ...
... Prepositions occur before noun phrases; semantically they are relational, often indicating spatial or temporal relations, whether literal (on it, before then, by the house) or metaphorical (on time, with gusto, beside herself). But they often indicate other relations as well (Hamlet was written by S ...
DOM in Spanish-state of the art
... introducing (new) specific participants, or because they are literally dislocated from their base position ...
... introducing (new) specific participants, or because they are literally dislocated from their base position ...
draft - University of Delaware
... elements are also not part of idioms, for instance the definite article. Possessors may or may not be; here I assume it is not (note that many instances of this idiom without the possessor, for instance “cat got the tongue,” are attested). In the tree above, Voice selects an NP headed by cat and a V ...
... elements are also not part of idioms, for instance the definite article. Possessors may or may not be; here I assume it is not (note that many instances of this idiom without the possessor, for instance “cat got the tongue,” are attested). In the tree above, Voice selects an NP headed by cat and a V ...
azu_td_9032531_sip1_
... the Fulbright Foundation for full financial support from 1985 to 1987, the P.E.O. Foundation for partial financial support during the years 1987-1990, the Department of Linguistics, U. of Arizona for teaching assistantships from 1987 to 1990, and Chiang Mai University, Thailand, for permission of my ...
... the Fulbright Foundation for full financial support from 1985 to 1987, the P.E.O. Foundation for partial financial support during the years 1987-1990, the Department of Linguistics, U. of Arizona for teaching assistantships from 1987 to 1990, and Chiang Mai University, Thailand, for permission of my ...
The Category of Participles
... with event-structure, i.e. participles that contain some event-denoting projection, are illicit in the complement of seem due to the fact that they lack the relevant scalar properties that seem selects for. However, scalar structure is not a definitional characteristic of adjectives, since there are ...
... with event-structure, i.e. participles that contain some event-denoting projection, are illicit in the complement of seem due to the fact that they lack the relevant scalar properties that seem selects for. However, scalar structure is not a definitional characteristic of adjectives, since there are ...
Identity of Roots - LingBuzz
... Morphology model are reviewed, and its original concept of an un-‐individuated acategorial root node is introduced. In section 2.1 arguments are presented which point to the conclusion that roots are in f ...
... Morphology model are reviewed, and its original concept of an un-‐individuated acategorial root node is introduced. In section 2.1 arguments are presented which point to the conclusion that roots are in f ...
The Notion of Surface-Syntactic Relation Revisited
... With respect to the possible number of occurrences of a given SSyntRel r with the same G, we put forth the following requirement: ...
... With respect to the possible number of occurrences of a given SSyntRel r with the same G, we put forth the following requirement: ...
B ARE ADJECTIVES AS SYNCRETIC FORMS Avel·lina Suñer
... adverbs, with which some of them alternate in certain contexts. The second part is devoted to verbal quantification that many bare adjectives can express, in all the meanings recognized by Bosque & Masullo (1998): the inherent ones, which depend on the combination with the verb, the frequency and du ...
... adverbs, with which some of them alternate in certain contexts. The second part is devoted to verbal quantification that many bare adjectives can express, in all the meanings recognized by Bosque & Masullo (1998): the inherent ones, which depend on the combination with the verb, the frequency and du ...
Two sources of scalarity within the verb phrase
... degree achievement verbs are derived from gradable adjectives and use insights from the properties of scale structure to derive the variable telicity effects that had previously been problematic under traditional accounts of aspectual structure and telicity. Meanwhile, Caudal and Nicolas (2005) and ...
... degree achievement verbs are derived from gradable adjectives and use insights from the properties of scale structure to derive the variable telicity effects that had previously been problematic under traditional accounts of aspectual structure and telicity. Meanwhile, Caudal and Nicolas (2005) and ...
New perspectives on Contrastive Grammar, Applied Linguistics and
... At the pragmatic and discourse levels, subsumption takes the form of parametrization processes of the variable elements of non-argumental constructions, which differ from level-1 constructions in that they are essentially idiomatic in nature, i.e. they consist of a combination of fixed and variable ...
... At the pragmatic and discourse levels, subsumption takes the form of parametrization processes of the variable elements of non-argumental constructions, which differ from level-1 constructions in that they are essentially idiomatic in nature, i.e. they consist of a combination of fixed and variable ...
automatic prosodic sentence analysis, accentuation and phrasing
... Some syntactic information, however, is of vital importance for a correct prosodic analysis. For example, the main verb (or verb group) in a sentence must be identified. This word (group) establishes a Predicate constituent, which should correspond to a separate Phi domain (Gee and Grosjean 1983). I ...
... Some syntactic information, however, is of vital importance for a correct prosodic analysis. For example, the main verb (or verb group) in a sentence must be identified. This word (group) establishes a Predicate constituent, which should correspond to a separate Phi domain (Gee and Grosjean 1983). I ...
On Partial Control and Parasitic PC Effects
... complements, appears to raise a number of questions. For instance, the R-assignment rule in (9) is quite stipulative and has no independent motivation but to cause the difference between EC and PC. The carefully constructed control module utterly pivots on this stipulation: without it the interplay ...
... complements, appears to raise a number of questions. For instance, the R-assignment rule in (9) is quite stipulative and has no independent motivation but to cause the difference between EC and PC. The carefully constructed control module utterly pivots on this stipulation: without it the interplay ...
Lexical Nature of Syntactic Ambiguity Resolution
... 1983) . This theory proposes that the first-stage parser of the MV/RR ambiguity, resolved with the reduced relative constructs a single parse (phrase structure) using only the graminterpretation, occur throughout natural discourse and typically go unnoticed. To illustrate, Table 1 contains examples ...
... 1983) . This theory proposes that the first-stage parser of the MV/RR ambiguity, resolved with the reduced relative constructs a single parse (phrase structure) using only the graminterpretation, occur throughout natural discourse and typically go unnoticed. To illustrate, Table 1 contains examples ...
Preprint
... The 1998 formulation of Wexler’s theory can explain why children produce OI errors at high rates in obligatory subject languages like English, Dutch and German. This is because such languages require the child to check against two D-features: Tense and Agreement. It can also explain why children ma ...
... The 1998 formulation of Wexler’s theory can explain why children produce OI errors at high rates in obligatory subject languages like English, Dutch and German. This is because such languages require the child to check against two D-features: Tense and Agreement. It can also explain why children ma ...
PETRARCH Documentation
... As of September 2014, we are regularly running PETRARCH on hundreds of thousands of sentences from a diverse set of sources and it is not crashing. If you encounter a situation where it is crashing, please let us know, ideally with a copy of the parsed input text that caused the error. Unexpected co ...
... As of September 2014, we are regularly running PETRARCH on hundreds of thousands of sentences from a diverse set of sources and it is not crashing. If you encounter a situation where it is crashing, please let us know, ideally with a copy of the parsed input text that caused the error. Unexpected co ...
Verb Sophistication
... So you can learn and count. To learn and So can you tell him?] Be very gentle with count when you grow, you could count cubes. There's little squares of cubes in and learn. [Researcher: Anything else?] the middle. And then also, there's a lump And so you could get to the number two up. So we can mak ...
... So you can learn and count. To learn and So can you tell him?] Be very gentle with count when you grow, you could count cubes. There's little squares of cubes in and learn. [Researcher: Anything else?] the middle. And then also, there's a lump And so you could get to the number two up. So we can mak ...
On `sit`/`stand`/`lie` auxiliation1
... regular morphological expression in the language. In every verbal word form a verbal base can be recognized that is imperfective, perfective, or biaspectual (biaspectual verb bases take on either an imperfective or a perfective interpretation depending on context; cf. Kuteva 1995b: 196). Standard gr ...
... regular morphological expression in the language. In every verbal word form a verbal base can be recognized that is imperfective, perfective, or biaspectual (biaspectual verb bases take on either an imperfective or a perfective interpretation depending on context; cf. Kuteva 1995b: 196). Standard gr ...
Indo-Aryan: From the Vedas to Modern Times
... By the end of 1950, five-s ixths of the translation was completed. My time at the School of Oriental and A frican Studies was then up and I joined the Indian Office Library as Ass istant Keeper. The Library was only just recovering from the disorganization caused by the war and there was still much ...
... By the end of 1950, five-s ixths of the translation was completed. My time at the School of Oriental and A frican Studies was then up and I joined the Indian Office Library as Ass istant Keeper. The Library was only just recovering from the disorganization caused by the war and there was still much ...
Variant 2 - Egypt IG Student Room
... • If there is only a comment which does not in any way relate to the question being asked (e.g. 'can’t do' or 'don’t know') or • If there is only a mark which isn’t an attempt at the question (e.g. a dash, a question mark). Award 0: • If there is any attempt that earns no credit. This could, for exa ...
... • If there is only a comment which does not in any way relate to the question being asked (e.g. 'can’t do' or 'don’t know') or • If there is only a mark which isn’t an attempt at the question (e.g. a dash, a question mark). Award 0: • If there is any attempt that earns no credit. This could, for exa ...
An English hAndbook for thE UnivErsity of PrEtoriA 2003
... the past participle not a finite verb, again created by changing the root vowel. “Swum” must be supplemented by an auxiliary verb: “She has swum the Midmar Mile a number of times”. ...
... the past participle not a finite verb, again created by changing the root vowel. “Swum” must be supplemented by an auxiliary verb: “She has swum the Midmar Mile a number of times”. ...
COMPASS Test Review Packet
... The COMPASS test is a self-adjusting, multiple choice test that is taken at the computer. The answer to your current question will determine the next question; it will stop once it has determined your level. Consequently the test is untimed and has a different number of questions for each student. I ...
... The COMPASS test is a self-adjusting, multiple choice test that is taken at the computer. The answer to your current question will determine the next question; it will stop once it has determined your level. Consequently the test is untimed and has a different number of questions for each student. I ...
Speculations on the syntax of subordinate clauses in Old English
... basic syntax of OE along the lines of proposals made for Dutch or German. It seems that, as in those languages, finite verbs generally occur towards the front of main clauses in OE but towards the end of subordinate clauses, and this asymmetry could be accounted for by assuming that in main clauses ...
... basic syntax of OE along the lines of proposals made for Dutch or German. It seems that, as in those languages, finite verbs generally occur towards the front of main clauses in OE but towards the end of subordinate clauses, and this asymmetry could be accounted for by assuming that in main clauses ...
Particle verbs and benefactive double objects in English: high and
... benefactive possessive element merges with an already categorized verb. The benefactive differs from the better researched dative in that the dative does involve a caused possession small clause structure. Particle verbs can occur in double object constructions, but they involve a benefactive-like s ...
... benefactive possessive element merges with an already categorized verb. The benefactive differs from the better researched dative in that the dative does involve a caused possession small clause structure. Particle verbs can occur in double object constructions, but they involve a benefactive-like s ...