Descriptions which have grown capital letters
... Obviously, proper names and definite descriptions each have a close kinship with this hybrid form of expression. So much so, in fact, that we might expect a comprehensive linguistic analysis of ...
... Obviously, proper names and definite descriptions each have a close kinship with this hybrid form of expression. So much so, in fact, that we might expect a comprehensive linguistic analysis of ...
Investigating naming convention adherence in Java references
... Third, phrase structure grammars are context free and recognise the aggregation of tagged words into grammatically coherent groups, but there is no guarantee that they are meaningful. For example, ‘The mat sat on the cat’ is grammatically correct, but absurd. Accordingly, the threat arises from an u ...
... Third, phrase structure grammars are context free and recognise the aggregation of tagged words into grammatically coherent groups, but there is no guarantee that they are meaningful. For example, ‘The mat sat on the cat’ is grammatically correct, but absurd. Accordingly, the threat arises from an u ...
Instruction-Based Approach- Avoidance Effects
... induce changes in liking, especially because of the special motivational significance of actually performing AA responses. Nevertheless, if mere instructions about stimulus-stimulus relations can produce changes in liking, than it is at least plausible that mere instructions about stimulus-action re ...
... induce changes in liking, especially because of the special motivational significance of actually performing AA responses. Nevertheless, if mere instructions about stimulus-stimulus relations can produce changes in liking, than it is at least plausible that mere instructions about stimulus-action re ...
Number Words as Number Names
... when arguing for numbers as objects The reasons should be the very same as why he did not appeal to the existence of the term the truth value true in English when arguing for truth values being objects (and objects of reference for sentences). Terms of the sort the number eight and the truth value t ...
... when arguing for numbers as objects The reasons should be the very same as why he did not appeal to the existence of the term the truth value true in English when arguing for truth values being objects (and objects of reference for sentences). Terms of the sort the number eight and the truth value t ...
STAGE 3-NEGOTIUM
... Each noun belongs to one of 5 groups called “declensions”. In Latin I we have: 1st, 2nd & 3rd declensions. Nouns also belong to one of 3 genders: Masculine, feminine or neuter Most 1st declension nouns are feminine; 2nd declension includes masculine and neuter nouns; 3rd declension includes nouns of ...
... Each noun belongs to one of 5 groups called “declensions”. In Latin I we have: 1st, 2nd & 3rd declensions. Nouns also belong to one of 3 genders: Masculine, feminine or neuter Most 1st declension nouns are feminine; 2nd declension includes masculine and neuter nouns; 3rd declension includes nouns of ...
NOT THE FINAL VERSION
... and valence. People usually hold stronger positive than negative associations between themselves – a positive implicit self-esteem. Because most people have positive associations with the self, a reliable way to increase a person’s liking for something is to get them to associate it with themselves. ...
... and valence. People usually hold stronger positive than negative associations between themselves – a positive implicit self-esteem. Because most people have positive associations with the self, a reliable way to increase a person’s liking for something is to get them to associate it with themselves. ...
first language - Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology
... phases in their acquisition of case morphology (Clahsen, 1984; Tracy, 1984): initially they use nouns without determiners; then they use mostly nominative forms of determiners independent of context; then there seems to be a binary case system involving both nominative and accusative (accusative for ...
... phases in their acquisition of case morphology (Clahsen, 1984; Tracy, 1984): initially they use nouns without determiners; then they use mostly nominative forms of determiners independent of context; then there seems to be a binary case system involving both nominative and accusative (accusative for ...
Subject Complements
... Example 1. Old Yeller is the name of a dog in one of my favorite books. 1. Fred Gipson wrote a wonderful book called Old Yeller. 2. I know the book will give you hours of pleasant reading. 3. The main character and narrator is Travis, a teenage boy. 4. The setting is Texas, just after the Civil War. ...
... Example 1. Old Yeller is the name of a dog in one of my favorite books. 1. Fred Gipson wrote a wonderful book called Old Yeller. 2. I know the book will give you hours of pleasant reading. 3. The main character and narrator is Travis, a teenage boy. 4. The setting is Texas, just after the Civil War. ...
On the grammar of names
... Detailed discussion throughout focuses on a very small number of familiar Indo-European languages. Inevitably, this means that some variables in the character of names and naming are neglected, though I do not think that the account given of their general properties suffer thereby. But the aim of th ...
... Detailed discussion throughout focuses on a very small number of familiar Indo-European languages. Inevitably, this means that some variables in the character of names and naming are neglected, though I do not think that the account given of their general properties suffer thereby. But the aim of th ...
Gerunds
... Gerunds – special notes on cases (1) Nominative: subject [infinitive in form] (2) Genitive: whenever you need “of” or “for” (objective genitive); often shows purpose with causā or gratiā “for the sake of” (3) Dative: rare; only with verbs that take a dative (4) Accusative:* the –ndum form is NOT for ...
... Gerunds – special notes on cases (1) Nominative: subject [infinitive in form] (2) Genitive: whenever you need “of” or “for” (objective genitive); often shows purpose with causā or gratiā “for the sake of” (3) Dative: rare; only with verbs that take a dative (4) Accusative:* the –ndum form is NOT for ...
TAGARAB: A Fast, Accurate Arabic Name Recognizer Using High
... form would be the one selected. This makes sense in the case of such a highly deterministic morphology and also given our time and resource constraints. We wanted to ensure that we got the right readings for a large number of highly frequent items, as this would be the most useful way to constrain t ...
... form would be the one selected. This makes sense in the case of such a highly deterministic morphology and also given our time and resource constraints. We wanted to ensure that we got the right readings for a large number of highly frequent items, as this would be the most useful way to constrain t ...
Buried Prejudice
... perior characteristics to the groups to which we belong, or in-groups, and to exaggerate differences between our own group and outsiders [see “The New Psychology of Leadership,” by Stephen D. Reicher, S. Alexander Haslam and Michael J. Platow; Scientific American Mind, August/September 2007]. Even ou ...
... perior characteristics to the groups to which we belong, or in-groups, and to exaggerate differences between our own group and outsiders [see “The New Psychology of Leadership,” by Stephen D. Reicher, S. Alexander Haslam and Michael J. Platow; Scientific American Mind, August/September 2007]. Even ou ...
Manual for Morphological Annotation
... We are pleased to publish the first version of the manual for morphological annotation of Czech sentences. We believe that such guidelines can be of use to the users of Prague Dependency Treebank 1.0 (PDT 1.0), as well as for preparation of new data. Let us recall the most important steps we passed ...
... We are pleased to publish the first version of the manual for morphological annotation of Czech sentences. We believe that such guidelines can be of use to the users of Prague Dependency Treebank 1.0 (PDT 1.0), as well as for preparation of new data. Let us recall the most important steps we passed ...
1 All in a Day`s Week1 Miriam R.L. Petrucki and Hans C. Boasii
... the week. As a consequence, it is also not possible to know which days precede and ...
... the week. As a consequence, it is also not possible to know which days precede and ...
The Forms of Personal Pronouns A
... 1. When you finish the book, please let me borrow it. [What noun does it take the place of?] 2. Have your classmates completed their research yet? 3. Kurt will hold the ladder for his father. 4. The mountains are beautiful, and some of them are covered with snow. 5. The town was named after its found ...
... 1. When you finish the book, please let me borrow it. [What noun does it take the place of?] 2. Have your classmates completed their research yet? 3. Kurt will hold the ladder for his father. 4. The mountains are beautiful, and some of them are covered with snow. 5. The town was named after its found ...
WAYS OF TRANSLATING THE PARTICIPLES AND PARTICIPIAL
... He didn't care that they saw him crying. (Hemingway) Йому було байдуже, 1) що вони бачать, 2) як він плаче. The objective with the past participle constructions having actually almost the same N/l/Ven structural pattern as the previously analysed complexes are characterized by a stronger predicative ...
... He didn't care that they saw him crying. (Hemingway) Йому було байдуже, 1) що вони бачать, 2) як він плаче. The objective with the past participle constructions having actually almost the same N/l/Ven structural pattern as the previously analysed complexes are characterized by a stronger predicative ...
The Substitution Interpretation of the Quantifiers
... that differ in various ways from the arithmeticallanguage above. For example,the counter-examplecan be extended to the full predicate calculus (with denumerablymany individual constants, denumerablymany predicateletters of every degree, and denumerably many function letters of every degree) by picki ...
... that differ in various ways from the arithmeticallanguage above. For example,the counter-examplecan be extended to the full predicate calculus (with denumerablymany individual constants, denumerablymany predicateletters of every degree, and denumerably many function letters of every degree) by picki ...
metaphysics - David James Barnett
... present without any violation of the laws (!f nature. A physically possible future that does not have a physically possible connection with the present is one that, given the present state of things, would haVe to be "inaugurated" by a miracle (an event that violated the laws of nature) but in which ...
... present without any violation of the laws (!f nature. A physically possible future that does not have a physically possible connection with the present is one that, given the present state of things, would haVe to be "inaugurated" by a miracle (an event that violated the laws of nature) but in which ...
... choice, portraying free will as an illusion, were more likely to cheat than control participants and scored lower on a measure of free will. A variety of other negative effects also have been noted. For example, having student participants read “determinism” statements, versus “free will” statements ...
this PDF file
... the alignment (and therefore syntactic) system, that in this case has led to a shift in the type of the language as such. Nevertheless, while not impossible, it is obviously also not inevitable for an alignment pattern change to trigger a holistic change per se in a given language. Alignment pattern ...
... the alignment (and therefore syntactic) system, that in this case has led to a shift in the type of the language as such. Nevertheless, while not impossible, it is obviously also not inevitable for an alignment pattern change to trigger a holistic change per se in a given language. Alignment pattern ...
1. The concept of “personality” most clearly embodies the notion of
... B) psychologists often do not agree on how to score the results of this test. C) the test does not discriminate effectively between those who are suicidal and those who are not. D) the test can be used effectively only with individuals who are severely maladjusted. ...
... B) psychologists often do not agree on how to score the results of this test. C) the test does not discriminate effectively between those who are suicidal and those who are not. D) the test can be used effectively only with individuals who are severely maladjusted. ...
A survey of the forms of Java reference names
... records for each declared name its species and its type. The corpus for this study is the bag, i.e. a set with duplicate elements, of all reference name declarations in INVocD: 626,262 fields, 1,556,931 formal arguments, and 1,319,071 local variables. We survey declarations instead of just names bec ...
... records for each declared name its species and its type. The corpus for this study is the bag, i.e. a set with duplicate elements, of all reference name declarations in INVocD: 626,262 fields, 1,556,931 formal arguments, and 1,319,071 local variables. We survey declarations instead of just names bec ...
MLA Citation Style - Farmingdale State College
... MLA Citation Style Commonly used for: Liberal Arts and Humanities ...
... MLA Citation Style Commonly used for: Liberal Arts and Humanities ...
Slide 1
... Pair Work 1. Fill in the blanks with the right words from the brackets. 1. My brother is taller than----------. (he/him) 2. This car is ------. (our/ours) 3. You and-----have done our duty. (I, he, me) 4. Let -----go home. (I, me) 5. Give----a chair to sit on. (he/him/his) 6. ------, listen to me. ...
... Pair Work 1. Fill in the blanks with the right words from the brackets. 1. My brother is taller than----------. (he/him) 2. This car is ------. (our/ours) 3. You and-----have done our duty. (I, he, me) 4. Let -----go home. (I, me) 5. Give----a chair to sit on. (he/him/his) 6. ------, listen to me. ...