CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO MISPARSE
PRESENT
Present
I misparse
you misparse
he/she/it misparses
we misparse
you misparse
they misparse
Present continuous
I am misparsing
you are misparsing
he/she/it is misparsing
we are misparsing
you are misparsing
they are misparsing
Present perfect
I have misparsed
you have misparsed
he/she/it has misparsed
we have misparsed
you have misparsed
they have misparsed
Present perfect continuous
I have been misparsing
you have been misparsing
he/she/it has been misparsing
we have been misparsing
you have been misparsing
they have been misparsing
Present tense is used to refer to circumstances that exist at the present time or over a period that includes the present time. The
present perfect refers to past events, although it can be considered to denote primarily the resulting present situation rather than the events themselves.
PAST
Past
I misparsed
you misparsed
he/she/it misparsed
we misparsed
you misparsed
they misparsed
Past continuous
I was misparsing
you were misparsing
he/she/it was misparsing
we were misparsing
you were misparsing
they were misparsing
Past perfect
I had misparsed
you had misparsed
he/she/it had misparsed
we had misparsed
you had misparsed
they had misparsed
Past perfect continuous
I had been misparsing
you had been misparsing
he/she/it had been misparsing
we had been misparsing
you had been misparsing
they had been misparsing
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will misparse
you will misparse
he/she/it will misparse
we will misparse
you will misparse
they will misparse
Future continuous
I will be misparsing
you will be misparsing
he/she/it will be misparsing
we will be misparsing
you will be misparsing
they will be misparsing
Future perfect
I will have misparsed
you will have misparsed
he/she/it will have misparsed
we will have misparsed
you will have misparsed
they will have misparsed
Future perfect continuous
I will have been misparsing
you will have been misparsing
he/she/it will have been misparsing
we will have been misparsing
you will have been misparsing
they will have been misparsing
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would misparse
you would misparse
he/she/it would misparse
we would misparse
you would misparse
they would misparse
Conditional continuous
I would be misparsing
you would be misparsing
he/she/it would be misparsing
we would be misparsing
you would be misparsing
they would be misparsing
Conditional perfect
I would have misparse
you would have misparse
he/she/it would have misparse
we would have misparse
you would have misparse
they would have misparse
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been misparsing
you would have been misparsing
he/she/it would have been misparsing
we would have been misparsing
you would have been misparsing
they would have been misparsing
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you misparse
we let´s misparse
you misparse
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
misparsed
Present Participle
misparsing
Infinitive shows the action beyond temporal perspective. The
present participle or gerund shows the action during the session. The
past participle shows the action after completion.
10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «MISPARSE»
Discover the use of
misparse in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
misparse and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Handbook of Historical Linguistics
In the former, it seems likely that the misparse which gave rise to the metathesis
was phonetic in nature, while in the latter, this seems most unlikely. But even
under this conception, there is clearly a difference between the misanalysis of
PPN ...
Brian Joseph, Richard Janda, 2008
2
People and Computers VIII
An example both these papers refer to is that of a palette selection misparse. The
example below shows that the misparse may well be a result of the user
believing that a selection action has been successful when, in fact it has not.
J. L. Alty, D. Diaper, S. Guest, 1993
3
The Initiation of Sound Change: Perception, Production, and ...
Doubtless a skilled Phoneticist could provide a plausible explanation, involving '
masking' effects between the phonetic properties of [r] and those of [w] leading to
a perceptual misparse – I at any rate believe that some such misparse took ...
Maria-Josep Solé, Daniel Recasens i Vives, 2012
4
Natural language processing
Any parser which recovers a unique initial parse will necessarily misparse certain
sentences, initially. We desire that those sentences be precisely those which
people initially misparse; it is the role of the conflict- resolution preferences we ...
Bell Communications Research, Inc, 1990
5
Proceedings of the Conference
(Brill and esnik, 1993), as illustrated in igure 6. , Misparses due to omission are
easily corrected by 'deploying lexicalized rules for the vocabulary items which
occur in phra-58$ with omitted elements. For the misparse illustrated in Figure 3,
...
Association for Computational Linguistics. Meeting, 1997
6
C# 5.0 in a Nutshell: The Definitive Reference
The second approach is more robust—particularly if you choose a format that
puts the four-digit year first: such strings are much harder to misparse by another
party. Further, strings formatted with a standardscompliant year-first format (such
as ...
Joseph Albahari, Ben Albahari, 2012
... MISPAGES MISPAGING MISPAINT MISPAINTED MISPAINTING MISPAINTS
MISPARSE MISPARSED MISPARSES MISPARSING MISPART MISPARTED
MISPARTING MISPARTS MISPATCH MISPATCHED MISPATCHES
MISPATCHING ...
Maliha Mendoza Mahmood, 2013
8
An Introduction to Language
5. Some sentences are more likely than others to give rise to a garden path effect
even though they have the same structures. This is true of the sentence pairs
below. Psycholinguistic experiments show that people misparse the (a)
sentences ...
Victoria Fromkin, Robert Rodman, Nina Hyams, 2013
9
Hack Proofing Your Network 2E
Because of this, we lose segfaults when we misparse packets; for instance, if we
attempt to get the TCP sequence number of a UDP packet that has no such value
. But on the flip side, it's a matter of flexibility—just as kernels generally presume ...
10
Grammatical Inference and Applications: Second International ...
Add uuderparsed sememes (AS, > c) to the word if there are no underparsed
phoneme sequences in the utterance (as then the misparse would most likely be
due to a missing word). • Alter the word's phoneme sequence so as to eliminate ...
Rafael C. Carrasco, Jose Oncina