CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO PRONOMINALISE
PRESENT
Present
I pronominalise
you pronominalise
he/she/it pronominalises
we pronominalise
you pronominalise
they pronominalise
Present continuous
I am pronominalising
you are pronominalising
he/she/it is pronominalising
we are pronominalising
you are pronominalising
they are pronominalising
Present perfect
I have pronominalised
you have pronominalised
he/she/it has pronominalised
we have pronominalised
you have pronominalised
they have pronominalised
Present perfect continuous
I have been pronominalising
you have been pronominalising
he/she/it has been pronominalising
we have been pronominalising
you have been pronominalising
they have been pronominalising
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 pronominalised
you pronominalised
he/she/it pronominalised
we pronominalised
you pronominalised
they pronominalised
Past continuous
I was pronominalising
you were pronominalising
he/she/it was pronominalising
we were pronominalising
you were pronominalising
they were pronominalising
Past perfect
I had pronominalised
you had pronominalised
he/she/it had pronominalised
we had pronominalised
you had pronominalised
they had pronominalised
Past perfect continuous
I had been pronominalising
you had been pronominalising
he/she/it had been pronominalising
we had been pronominalising
you had been pronominalising
they had been pronominalising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will pronominalise
you will pronominalise
he/she/it will pronominalise
we will pronominalise
you will pronominalise
they will pronominalise
Future continuous
I will be pronominalising
you will be pronominalising
he/she/it will be pronominalising
we will be pronominalising
you will be pronominalising
they will be pronominalising
Future perfect
I will have pronominalised
you will have pronominalised
he/she/it will have pronominalised
we will have pronominalised
you will have pronominalised
they will have pronominalised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been pronominalising
you will have been pronominalising
he/she/it will have been pronominalising
we will have been pronominalising
you will have been pronominalising
they will have been pronominalising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would pronominalise
you would pronominalise
he/she/it would pronominalise
we would pronominalise
you would pronominalise
they would pronominalise
Conditional continuous
I would be pronominalising
you would be pronominalising
he/she/it would be pronominalising
we would be pronominalising
you would be pronominalising
they would be pronominalising
Conditional perfect
I would have pronominalise
you would have pronominalise
he/she/it would have pronominalise
we would have pronominalise
you would have pronominalise
they would have pronominalise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been pronominalising
you would have been pronominalising
he/she/it would have been pronominalising
we would have been pronominalising
you would have been pronominalising
they would have been pronominalising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you pronominalise
we let´s pronominalise
you pronominalise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Infinitive
to pronominalise
Past participle
pronominalised
Present Participle
pronominalising
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 «PRONOMINALISE»
Discover the use of
pronominalise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
pronominalise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
First, they can pronominalise arguments of predicates other than verbs; in (79a, b
) they pronominalise arguments of adjectives: (79) a. J'y suis prêt. b. J'en suis
content. 1 I-y am ready I-en am happy 'I'm ready for it.' 'I'm happy about it.' This is
...
2
Universal Grammar (RLE Linguistics A: General Linguistics)
... in predicates cannot pronominalise their subjects — though they may precede
them. Johnj hit him selfj '''He/he-selfj hit Johnj The menj insulted each otherj *
Each othe^ insulted the me^ Malagasy Namono tena4 Rabej ; *Namono an-
dRabej ...
Edward L. Keenan, Andrew W Mellon Professor of History and Director Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection Edward L Keenan, 2014
3
Introduction to English Linguistics
... pronominalisation tests may first look straightforward. The status of [my sister] is
uncontroversial, we can easily pronominalise this string by she. The string [read
the letter to John] is also uncontroversial, it can be pronominalised with [do so].
Ingo Plag, Maria Braun, Sabine Lappe, 2009
4
Pragmatics: A Multidisciplinary Perspective
Where children with normal language omit old information at an MLU“) of three
and pronominalise it at an MLU of five, most SLI children pronominalise old
information regardless of their MLU (Skarakis and Greenfield 1932). Once again
...
5
Current Approaches to African Linguistics
Avec 1'agent initial pronominalise, cette disposition est strictement obligatoire.
Par exemple, dans la construction active initiale (22a), si on pronominalise les
actants, on peut avoir (22b). (22c) est impossible (ici se manifeste le niveau plus
...
6
Neuphilologische Mitteilungen
Mais: La cheminée de la maison me plaît — La cheminée m'en plaît.12 Avec le
verbe être ou un verbe similaire, le possesseur se pronominalise, dans la langue
écrite ou soutenue, par le pronom en: La cheminée de la maison est (paraît) ...
... and the noun phrase follows in a separate intonation unit. She argues that this
phenomenon cannot be interpreted as a hesitation and hypothesises that the
pattern may originate "when the speaker intends to pronominalise the referent,
and ...
8
History of Linguistics 2005: Selected Papers from the Tenth ...
Ainsi "en" qui pronominalise des syntagmes en "de + nom" — d'origine latine,
portant "de" qui est un signe du complément d'objet indirect — ne s'accorde en
aucun cas avec le verbe transitif (voir appendice 1, n° 9); pour le verbe "coûter" ...
... 1'-L- (in which 1'- is the augment) that is used to pronominalise possessive
modifiers. The entire construction of 1"zé plus noun could be analysed in terms of
apposition. (149) íࣨzá ntóm 'somebody else's hat' (150) vôm zì͡ 'anywhere'.
Mark L.O. Van de Velde, 2008
10
Empirical Methods in Natural Language Generation: ...
such as Modern India (the corresponding REG08-TYPE value is name); whether
to go for a common-noun re, i.e. with a category noun like country as the head (
common); whether to pronominalise the re (pronoun); or whether it can be left ...
Emiel Krahmer, Mariet Theune, 2010