A Grammar of Bora with Special Attention to Tone
... Verbs derived from nouns . . . . 4.3.2.1 -lle ‘treat like, regard as’ ...
... Verbs derived from nouns . . . . 4.3.2.1 -lle ‘treat like, regard as’ ...
CONJUNCTIONS AND GRAMMATICAL AGREEMENT WHEN
... Corpus data and sentence production experiments were used to test hypotheses about the mechanisms involved in producing agreement. A search of American English sentences from the World Wide Web revealed that speakers often produce singular verbs with conjoined subjects (28% singular verbs overall), ...
... Corpus data and sentence production experiments were used to test hypotheses about the mechanisms involved in producing agreement. A search of American English sentences from the World Wide Web revealed that speakers often produce singular verbs with conjoined subjects (28% singular verbs overall), ...
Rune - Open Journal Systems vid Lunds universitet
... and operations. The input language may be in 16 character ranes, which may then be transliterated by one operation. But one may alternatively input a rane text in Latin letters. Another operation is grammatical analysis of the transliterated text, which results in a functional representation with wo ...
... and operations. The input language may be in 16 character ranes, which may then be transliterated by one operation. But one may alternatively input a rane text in Latin letters. Another operation is grammatical analysis of the transliterated text, which results in a functional representation with wo ...
Different by-phrases with adjectival and verbal passives: Evidence
... as Tense/Aspect; at this level, we get reference to an event token, i.e. an event that 4 The kind approach to adjectival passives is also taken up by Gese (2011), who provides additional experimental support that we are dealing with event kinds, as well as by Maienborn and Geldermann (2013) and Maie ...
... as Tense/Aspect; at this level, we get reference to an event token, i.e. an event that 4 The kind approach to adjectival passives is also taken up by Gese (2011), who provides additional experimental support that we are dealing with event kinds, as well as by Maienborn and Geldermann (2013) and Maie ...
Adjectival participles, event kind modification and
... not follow straightforwardly from any of the previous approaches.5 In these papers, I propose that the restrictions on event-related modification with adjectival passives derive from general restrictions on kind modification. The current paper builds on my previous proposal that adjectival passives ...
... not follow straightforwardly from any of the previous approaches.5 In these papers, I propose that the restrictions on event-related modification with adjectival passives derive from general restrictions on kind modification. The current paper builds on my previous proposal that adjectival passives ...
LINGUISTIC ANALYSIS
... related to (1a), (2b), containing the word that, is UNGRAMMATICAL (an asterisk at the beginning of a sentence indicates that it is ungrammatical, which means that it violates some rule). ...
... related to (1a), (2b), containing the word that, is UNGRAMMATICAL (an asterisk at the beginning of a sentence indicates that it is ungrammatical, which means that it violates some rule). ...
View/Open - Minerva Access
... prenasalised consonants with nasal allophones, noun phrases with a complex syntactic structure, a range of demonstratives which distinguish for elevation, a large vocabulary of kin terms including a set of dyadic kin terms, extensive use of complex predicates consisting of a light verb plus a coverb ...
... prenasalised consonants with nasal allophones, noun phrases with a complex syntactic structure, a range of demonstratives which distinguish for elevation, a large vocabulary of kin terms including a set of dyadic kin terms, extensive use of complex predicates consisting of a light verb plus a coverb ...
COMPLEX SENTENCES AN ANALYTICAL GRAMMAR
... has the pattern S V O. (Little Bo Peep is the subject; lost is the verb and her sheep is the object.) •There are seven simple sentence patterns. An example of each is given below. In these examples we use the system of marking sentence parts that will be followed throughout the notes. Square bracket ...
... has the pattern S V O. (Little Bo Peep is the subject; lost is the verb and her sheep is the object.) •There are seven simple sentence patterns. An example of each is given below. In these examples we use the system of marking sentence parts that will be followed throughout the notes. Square bracket ...
NGUYEN THI THUY MA THESIS
... analysis” will focus on the differences between the English and Vietnamese passive expressions on the ground of the similarity. ...
... analysis” will focus on the differences between the English and Vietnamese passive expressions on the ground of the similarity. ...
NGUYEN THI THUY MA THESIS-2006
... shall, will, ought to, used to, need, dare. In English, Voice is strictly related to auxiliary verbs. Some Auxiliary verbs like do, have, be can be used as lexical verbs which have a wide range of forms including the present participle and the past participle. In the relation to the semi – auxiliary ...
... shall, will, ought to, used to, need, dare. In English, Voice is strictly related to auxiliary verbs. Some Auxiliary verbs like do, have, be can be used as lexical verbs which have a wide range of forms including the present participle and the past participle. In the relation to the semi – auxiliary ...
Gerunds
... Gerunds • Gerunds are the base form of a verb + an ‘ing’ ending. • They function as NOUNS. Example: Frolicking is relaxing. I dislike knitting. ...
... Gerunds • Gerunds are the base form of a verb + an ‘ing’ ending. • They function as NOUNS. Example: Frolicking is relaxing. I dislike knitting. ...
Non-standard functions of "like" in spoken discourse
... The word like received quite an intensive attention from scholars in the past thirty years. The increasing interest in studying the word like in the past three decades was not triggered only by its gradual omnipresence in the spoken discourse but also by the various new uses that have been acknowled ...
... The word like received quite an intensive attention from scholars in the past thirty years. The increasing interest in studying the word like in the past three decades was not triggered only by its gradual omnipresence in the spoken discourse but also by the various new uses that have been acknowled ...
viewed - Association for Computational Linguistics
... We drank more beer than a. they drank beer. b. *they drank beer. ...
... We drank more beer than a. they drank beer. b. *they drank beer. ...
Music 231 Small Structures: Cadences, Phrases and Periods
... The plagal cadence is rarely used in a structural way. It almost always is found after the end of a period (usually after the last period of the piece), and acts as an extension (a tag) to that period or the part which it ends. More about phrases and sub-phrases The word "phrase" here applies to the ...
... The plagal cadence is rarely used in a structural way. It almost always is found after the end of a period (usually after the last period of the piece), and acts as an extension (a tag) to that period or the part which it ends. More about phrases and sub-phrases The word "phrase" here applies to the ...
Constructions with and without articles Henriëtte de Swart
... (the) hospital, play (the) piano). There is a third class of bare constructions which is neither definite nor indefinite, but plural or quantificational in nature. Here we find bare coordination (mother and child), reduplication (English from door to door = many doors in succession) and bare PPs lik ...
... (the) hospital, play (the) piano). There is a third class of bare constructions which is neither definite nor indefinite, but plural or quantificational in nature. Here we find bare coordination (mother and child), reduplication (English from door to door = many doors in succession) and bare PPs lik ...
Read More - UHN - Univ. HKBP Nommensen
... The sentence may be further divided according to the function each word has in the subject predicate- relationship. Each of these functions is classified as a different part of speech. The words that form the central core of the sentence - around which all the other words "cluster''- are the parts o ...
... The sentence may be further divided according to the function each word has in the subject predicate- relationship. Each of these functions is classified as a different part of speech. The words that form the central core of the sentence - around which all the other words "cluster''- are the parts o ...
Definition - KhmerDocs
... An adjective phrase is a group of words that does the work of an adjective. The adjective phrase has its head as an adjective, which may preceded by premodifiers and followed by post-modifiers. Sometimes only one adjective is also an adjective phrase. CUE ...
... An adjective phrase is a group of words that does the work of an adjective. The adjective phrase has its head as an adjective, which may preceded by premodifiers and followed by post-modifiers. Sometimes only one adjective is also an adjective phrase. CUE ...
Russian Deverbal Nouns - Dipòsit Digital de la UB
... or the result of that action. If nouns denoting processes are closer to verbs, nouns denoting a result, that is, a concrete or an abstract entity resulting from the action, are closer to nouns. Both result and event nouns inherit the argument structure of the base verb. These analyses of the lexical ...
... or the result of that action. If nouns denoting processes are closer to verbs, nouns denoting a result, that is, a concrete or an abstract entity resulting from the action, are closer to nouns. Both result and event nouns inherit the argument structure of the base verb. These analyses of the lexical ...
UM_Sintaksis_(teorgrammatika)_022600_st
... naming unit employed for naming things, actions, qualities and so on. Subjectpredicate structures may happen to be identical with sentences in form (e.g. They worked. They worked hard.), but it is only sentences and not phrases which have intonation of their own. It is also important to notice that ...
... naming unit employed for naming things, actions, qualities and so on. Subjectpredicate structures may happen to be identical with sentences in form (e.g. They worked. They worked hard.), but it is only sentences and not phrases which have intonation of their own. It is also important to notice that ...
Identifying Relations for Open Information Extraction
... constraint leads the extractor to include nouns in the relation phrase, solving this problem. Although the syntactic constraint significantly reduces incoherent and uninformative extractions, it allows overly-specific relation phrases such as is offering only modest greenhouse gas reduction targets ...
... constraint leads the extractor to include nouns in the relation phrase, solving this problem. Although the syntactic constraint significantly reduces incoherent and uninformative extractions, it allows overly-specific relation phrases such as is offering only modest greenhouse gas reduction targets ...
the EMNLP 2011 paper - ReVerb
... constraint leads the extractor to include nouns in the relation phrase, solving this problem. Although the syntactic constraint significantly reduces incoherent and uninformative extractions, it allows overly-specific relation phrases such as is offering only modest greenhouse gas reduction targets ...
... constraint leads the extractor to include nouns in the relation phrase, solving this problem. Although the syntactic constraint significantly reduces incoherent and uninformative extractions, it allows overly-specific relation phrases such as is offering only modest greenhouse gas reduction targets ...
this PDF file - Journal of Language Modelling
... of advanced techniques that can be applied to tackle ambiguity issues, including statistical and non-statistical ones. However, when dealing with ambiguity in languages like Wolof, there is a restriction on the use of certain disambiguation methods. Due to the lack of resources, there is a very limi ...
... of advanced techniques that can be applied to tackle ambiguity issues, including statistical and non-statistical ones. However, when dealing with ambiguity in languages like Wolof, there is a restriction on the use of certain disambiguation methods. Due to the lack of resources, there is a very limi ...
PROBLEMS OF ADJECTIVE SEQUENCING IN ENGLISH
... Semantically speaking, adjectives, more than other categories, are able to take different meanings depending on their context. The following examples are illustrative. (1) A difficult child. (2) A difficult book. Priestly (1761) was, perhaps, the first English Grammarian to recognize the adjective a ...
... Semantically speaking, adjectives, more than other categories, are able to take different meanings depending on their context. The following examples are illustrative. (1) A difficult child. (2) A difficult book. Priestly (1761) was, perhaps, the first English Grammarian to recognize the adjective a ...
Hebrew Syntax and Exposition - James D. Price Publications
... 5.5 The Derivation of Hebrew Verbs ........................................................................... 119 5.6 The Attributes of Hebrew Verbs ............................................................................ 122 5.7 The Syntactic Slot of Verbs ..................................... ...
... 5.5 The Derivation of Hebrew Verbs ........................................................................... 119 5.6 The Attributes of Hebrew Verbs ............................................................................ 122 5.7 The Syntactic Slot of Verbs ..................................... ...
Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Computational
... SD makes available two options, suited to different use cases: in one, every word of the original sentence is present as a node with relations between it and other nodes, whereas in the latter, certain words are “collapsed” out of the representation, making such changes as turning prepositions into ...
... SD makes available two options, suited to different use cases: in one, every word of the original sentence is present as a node with relations between it and other nodes, whereas in the latter, certain words are “collapsed” out of the representation, making such changes as turning prepositions into ...