Some characteristics of deverbal nominals in Slavic and Romance
... in Slavic languages because in these languages the verb shows greater morphological complexity than it does in the Romance languages. The nominal inflectional system of the three Slavic languages examined here is rather rich: (a) they manifest morphological distinctions for three distinct grammatica ...
... in Slavic languages because in these languages the verb shows greater morphological complexity than it does in the Romance languages. The nominal inflectional system of the three Slavic languages examined here is rather rich: (a) they manifest morphological distinctions for three distinct grammatica ...
Towards the Automatic Mining of Similes in Literary Texts
... simile components. It is, therefore, not surprising that dependency parsing had been previously used for this purpose (Niculae & Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil, 2014). We choose, however, to rely on syntactic chunking because our approach is mainly phrase-based and syntactic chunking tends to be more relia ...
... simile components. It is, therefore, not surprising that dependency parsing had been previously used for this purpose (Niculae & Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil, 2014). We choose, however, to rely on syntactic chunking because our approach is mainly phrase-based and syntactic chunking tends to be more relia ...
Sample: Lesson One - Pro Lingua Associates
... Only a few English nouns are masculine or feminine. This is good news if you are learning English because it means that you rarely need to think about whether a noun is masculine or feminine! ...
... Only a few English nouns are masculine or feminine. This is good news if you are learning English because it means that you rarely need to think about whether a noun is masculine or feminine! ...
sentence ([the, girl, sing, a, song], []).
... • A sentence “the girl sing a song” also get parsed if a verb sing is available in the lexicon which is wrong syntactically. • The semantically incorrect sentence will also be parsed. For example, “the apple eats a boy” is correct according to the above grammar. • The reason is simple that we have n ...
... • A sentence “the girl sing a song” also get parsed if a verb sing is available in the lexicon which is wrong syntactically. • The semantically incorrect sentence will also be parsed. For example, “the apple eats a boy” is correct according to the above grammar. • The reason is simple that we have n ...
Interrogating possessive have: a case study
... Another standard teaching aid for learners of English is Michael Swan’s Practical English Usage. This handbook discusses all three forms of possessive have in questions, noting that have got means exactly the same in this case. However, it is also noted that have got constructions are less common in ...
... Another standard teaching aid for learners of English is Michael Swan’s Practical English Usage. This handbook discusses all three forms of possessive have in questions, noting that have got means exactly the same in this case. However, it is also noted that have got constructions are less common in ...
SOME NOTES ON ENGLISH AND SLOVAK PERSONAL PRONOUNS
... Not all languages have the same system of personal pronouns. In Hun garian, for example, gender is not distinguished, and there are special pronouns corresponding to the Slovak V Y when used to show respect (distinguishing number as well); special pronouns of respect exist in Spanish and in other l ...
... Not all languages have the same system of personal pronouns. In Hun garian, for example, gender is not distinguished, and there are special pronouns corresponding to the Slovak V Y when used to show respect (distinguishing number as well); special pronouns of respect exist in Spanish and in other l ...
Case marking in infinitive (ad- form)
... masdar in the adverbial case. This form has been called infinitive even though it has been observed by several authors (Martirosovi 1955; Dzidziguri 1989; Chkhubianishvili 1972) that it differs from what is called infinitive in, for instance, Indo-European languages. In order to avoid confusion, we ...
... masdar in the adverbial case. This form has been called infinitive even though it has been observed by several authors (Martirosovi 1955; Dzidziguri 1989; Chkhubianishvili 1972) that it differs from what is called infinitive in, for instance, Indo-European languages. In order to avoid confusion, we ...
Punctuation Pointers
... quotation marks, but one which illustrates the dangers of misuse in ordinary prose, is seen in advertising, especially in advertisements for small restaurants, for example "just around the corner," or "a good place to eat." No single, identifiable, citable person ever really said, for the record, "j ...
... quotation marks, but one which illustrates the dangers of misuse in ordinary prose, is seen in advertising, especially in advertisements for small restaurants, for example "just around the corner," or "a good place to eat." No single, identifiable, citable person ever really said, for the record, "j ...
Deadjectival human nouns: conversion, nominal ellipsis, or mixed
... A second problem is Kester’s analysis of the schwa, which she analyzes as an inflectional morpheme. In canonical DPs the inflectional schwa is used on adjectives in Dutch if the determiner is definite or plural or, with an indefinite singular article, if the noun is a common noun. This means that in ...
... A second problem is Kester’s analysis of the schwa, which she analyzes as an inflectional morpheme. In canonical DPs the inflectional schwa is used on adjectives in Dutch if the determiner is definite or plural or, with an indefinite singular article, if the noun is a common noun. This means that in ...
ssc english book
... Proper nouns are nouns that refer to specific entities. Writers of English capitalize proper nouns like Lucknow, India, Ravi, Priya. Etc. Common Nouns Common nouns refer to general, unspecific categories of entities. Countable Nouns To linguists, these count nouns can occur in both single and pl ...
... Proper nouns are nouns that refer to specific entities. Writers of English capitalize proper nouns like Lucknow, India, Ravi, Priya. Etc. Common Nouns Common nouns refer to general, unspecific categories of entities. Countable Nouns To linguists, these count nouns can occur in both single and pl ...
Adjective or Adverbs
... Good is an adjective, so you do not do good or live good, but you do well and livewell. Remember, though, that an adjective follows sense-verbs and be-verbs, so you also feel good, look good, smell good, are good, have been good, etc. So: "My mother looks good." This does not mean that she has good ...
... Good is an adjective, so you do not do good or live good, but you do well and livewell. Remember, though, that an adjective follows sense-verbs and be-verbs, so you also feel good, look good, smell good, are good, have been good, etc. So: "My mother looks good." This does not mean that she has good ...
VI - Eng - II - St. Claret School
... 6. Fill in the blank with the appropriate tense of the verb given in bracket:I _______ (come) to Mumbai six months ago. I ________ (start) going to school three months ago. When I ______ (return) to Ahmedabad, I _________(study) in the seventh standard. 7. Fill in the blank with the appropriate tens ...
... 6. Fill in the blank with the appropriate tense of the verb given in bracket:I _______ (come) to Mumbai six months ago. I ________ (start) going to school three months ago. When I ______ (return) to Ahmedabad, I _________(study) in the seventh standard. 7. Fill in the blank with the appropriate tens ...
English Grammar for Students of French
... Circle the pronouns in the sentences below. ! Draw an arrow from the pronoun to its antecedent, or antecedents if there is more than one. 1. Did Mary call Peter? Yes, she called him last night. 2. The coat and dress are elegant, but they are expensive. 3. Mary baked the cookies herself. 4. Paul and ...
... Circle the pronouns in the sentences below. ! Draw an arrow from the pronoun to its antecedent, or antecedents if there is more than one. 1. Did Mary call Peter? Yes, she called him last night. 2. The coat and dress are elegant, but they are expensive. 3. Mary baked the cookies herself. 4. Paul and ...
A concise manual of grammar, usage and style
... Pejorative language is the use of insulting terms to refer to a race, sex, nationality, religion, etc. ---------------------40 The possessive form indicates ownership.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------41 A preposition is a word that shows the ...
... Pejorative language is the use of insulting terms to refer to a race, sex, nationality, religion, etc. ---------------------40 The possessive form indicates ownership.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------41 A preposition is a word that shows the ...
help file
... In the screenshot below, we have searched for the lemma “lióð” (which in an Old Norse dictionary would be “ljóð”) in the text Strengleikar, and having sub(ject) as its function. In other words, this is an example of a combined morphological and syntactic search, but the possibilities for the latt ...
... In the screenshot below, we have searched for the lemma “lióð” (which in an Old Norse dictionary would be “ljóð”) in the text Strengleikar, and having sub(ject) as its function. In other words, this is an example of a combined morphological and syntactic search, but the possibilities for the latt ...
5 NOUNS
... few other smaller patterns; some words are simply irregular and do not conform to any pattern (see 5.3). Second, there is a group of human nouns which often have alternative dual and plural forms which pattern differently from other irregular words, and refer to different constellations of referents ...
... few other smaller patterns; some words are simply irregular and do not conform to any pattern (see 5.3). Second, there is a group of human nouns which often have alternative dual and plural forms which pattern differently from other irregular words, and refer to different constellations of referents ...
Assignment Writing and Academic Style
... question; they are: what, which, who, whom, whatever, whichever, whoever and whomever. The interrogative pronoun may look like an interrogative adjective, but it is used differently in a sentence. It acts as a pronoun, taking the place of a noun. ...
... question; they are: what, which, who, whom, whatever, whichever, whoever and whomever. The interrogative pronoun may look like an interrogative adjective, but it is used differently in a sentence. It acts as a pronoun, taking the place of a noun. ...
lesson 1 - Fas Harvard
... modern Fārs, which the Greek historians and geographers called Persis, an area under Elamite control with its capital at Anzan/Anšan. We do not know when or how the Old Persian-speaking tribes came from Central Asia to southwest Iran, where they are found in the historical period. The only clue is t ...
... modern Fārs, which the Greek historians and geographers called Persis, an area under Elamite control with its capital at Anzan/Anšan. We do not know when or how the Old Persian-speaking tribes came from Central Asia to southwest Iran, where they are found in the historical period. The only clue is t ...
Case marking in infinitive (ad- form) clauses in Old Georgian1
... Another group of verbs is characterized by having experiencer subjects. The case marking differs from the first class in assigning dative case to the experiencer subject, and the nominative case to the object if any, independent of the choice of tense. The remaining verbs, including one-, two- and t ...
... Another group of verbs is characterized by having experiencer subjects. The case marking differs from the first class in assigning dative case to the experiencer subject, and the nominative case to the object if any, independent of the choice of tense. The remaining verbs, including one-, two- and t ...
mokilese-v1
... • ‘five’ = limmen or limpas • The second part of the Mokilese word is repeated in each row: • jilmen, pahmen, limmen in row 1; • jilpas, pahpas, limpas in row 2 This suggests that these Mokilese words are made up of two parts: the first part that relates to the English numbers, and the second part, ...
... • ‘five’ = limmen or limpas • The second part of the Mokilese word is repeated in each row: • jilmen, pahmen, limmen in row 1; • jilpas, pahpas, limpas in row 2 This suggests that these Mokilese words are made up of two parts: the first part that relates to the English numbers, and the second part, ...
Predicate Adjective
... • Predicate nouns always use subject pronouns (not object pronouns)—I, he, she, we, they, who. ...
... • Predicate nouns always use subject pronouns (not object pronouns)—I, he, she, we, they, who. ...
Prepositions - Nutley Public Schools
... Usually there is an article or other adjective that comes before the object. For example, find the preposition in this sentence. ...
... Usually there is an article or other adjective that comes before the object. For example, find the preposition in this sentence. ...
Conflicting cues and competition in subject–verb agreement
... effects of distributivity can also be found in English under certain circumstances, and she attributed the difference between her results and the failure to find effects of distributivity in Bock and Miller (1991) to differences in the imageability of the preamble phrases. Similarly, Bock et al. (1999) ...
... effects of distributivity can also be found in English under certain circumstances, and she attributed the difference between her results and the failure to find effects of distributivity in Bock and Miller (1991) to differences in the imageability of the preamble phrases. Similarly, Bock et al. (1999) ...
doc
... stem that already has a class prefix? Which? If any, list them, grouping them into three categories depending on whether they have a locative meaning (like the Shona class 16 prefix pa-), a diminutive/augmentative meaning or neither of the preceding two. 1.2.3. Suppression or replacement of noun cla ...
... stem that already has a class prefix? Which? If any, list them, grouping them into three categories depending on whether they have a locative meaning (like the Shona class 16 prefix pa-), a diminutive/augmentative meaning or neither of the preceding two. 1.2.3. Suppression or replacement of noun cla ...
Noun Class Prefix Questionnaire – version 1.3
... stem that already has a class prefix? Which? If any, list them, grouping them into three categories depending on whether they have a locative meaning (like the Shona class 16 prefix pa-), a diminutive/augmentative meaning or neither of the preceding two. 1.2.3. Suppression or replacement of noun cla ...
... stem that already has a class prefix? Which? If any, list them, grouping them into three categories depending on whether they have a locative meaning (like the Shona class 16 prefix pa-), a diminutive/augmentative meaning or neither of the preceding two. 1.2.3. Suppression or replacement of noun cla ...