PALABRAS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADAS CON «NONINFLECTIONAL»
noninflectional
noninflectional
admitting
characterized
inflection
want
thank
existence
tell
friend
about
link
this
page
visit
webmaster
wiktionary
comparable
inflectional
retrieved
from
http
index
title=noninflectional
oldid=
categories
define
pertaining
used
ending
linguistics
noting
language
latin
definitions
onelook
search
found
dictionaries
with
that
include
word
click
first
below
directly
where
collins
always
spanish
italian
your
usage
examples
trends
ˌnɒnɪnˈflɛkʃənəl
photos
flickr
meaning
what
anagrams
thinkexist
words
start
finder
list
prefix
official
starting
including
children
intermediate
wordsmyth
urban
noninary
nonine
inflammatory
speech
noning
intelligent
nintendo
month
defined
more
uses
letters
related
tureng
turkish
adobe
flash
10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «NONINFLECTIONAL»
Descubre el uso de
noninflectional en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
noninflectional y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
Focus and Secondary Predication
Second, his proposal includes the hypothesis that the configuration in which a
focus-assigned subject is followed by an unstressed predicate can be extended
from finite thetic sentences to noninflectional thetic sentences. Turning to the
latter ...
2
Towards a Social Science of Language: Papers in Honor of ...
So a straight comparison can be made between deletion rates for inflectional S's
in this position and noninflectional S's (remembering to control for stress). The
results are given in Table 6, and they show a dramatic functional effect.
3
Language and Human Understanding
In both inflectional and noninflectional morphology we find examples of new
words formed by the composition of two morphemes in the so-called Item and
Arrangement system, exemplified in the inflectional case when we have “cats”
formed ...
4
Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World
These characteristics of Eskimo productive postbases lead us to suggest the
existence of a branch of morphology, which is neither inflection, nor derivation,
that we will call 'productive noninflectional concatenation,' or PNC (PNC was
called ...
5
Salish Languages and Linguistics: Theoretical and ...
While inflectional affixes (aspect and subject/object markers) do seem to have
positional properties in that they occur outside all noninflectional affixes, the
inflection-derivation distinction as defined by Anderson (1982, 1988) cannot
capture ...
Ewa Czaykowski-Higgins, Marvin Dale Kinkade, 1998
6
Adverbial Constructions in the Languages of Europe
Noninflectional converbs and converbs inflecting only for number are used in the
context of same subject (SS), converbs inflecting for person and number usually
express different subject (DS). Thus the noninflectional conditional converb in ...
Johan van der Auwera, 1998
7
Laminar-Turbulent Transition: IUTAM Symposium, Sedona/AZ ...
1969: A NEW CLASS OF INVISCID NONINFLECTIONAL NEUTRAL SOLUTIONS
. (a) Another class of inviscid neutral solutions was found to exist when there is a
region of relative supersonic flow. The phase speed of these waves is between ...
H.F. Fasel, W.S. Saric, 2000
8
Morphology: Critical Concepts in Linguistics
Tense and aspect, then, might well be claimed to be noninflectional categories
on the view just outlined, a counterintuitive (though not obviously incorrect) result.
Recent work in syntax, however, supplies an excellent foundation for treating ...
9
The Crosslinguistic Study of Language Acquisition: Volume 5: ...
Consider a very simplified example: Languages can be classified as
INFLECTIONAL versus NONINFLECTIONAL, in terms of whether or not
grammatical relations and categories are directly marked on nouns or verbs. For
example, Latin is ...
10
Metataxis in Practice: Dependency Syntax for Multilingual ...
Auxiliaries (T) An auxiliary can be classified according to the inflectional form it
requires (stem/infinitive/gerund) of the lexical verb that comes to the left of it, and
to its own inflectional pattern (verbal/adjectival/noninflectional). (l) Causative
sase ...
Dan Maxwell, Klaus Schubert, 1989