«DEVERBATIVE» 관련 영어 책
다음 도서 목록 항목에서
deverbative 의 용법을 확인하세요.
deverbative 에 관련된 책과 해당 책의 짧은 발췌문을 통해 영어 서적에서 단어가 사용되는 맥락을 제공합니다.
1
Indo-European Word Formation: Proceedings of the Conference ...
To conclude, the often quoted assumption that the metatonie douce and length in
the Baltic deverbative nouns is the result of their pre- history as Proto-Indo-
European root nouns may be questioned; especial- ly when previous studies in
the ...
James Clackson, Birgit Anette Olsen, 2004
2
Aspects of Tone and Voice in Phuthi
That is, it is as if deverbative nouns are prosodically mismatched with regular
verbs and nouns: they do not see right word-edge as a phrase-edge, but as an
alignment zone free of the constraining anti-align effect of the Wap presence (§
4.1.4.6 ...
Simon Scurr Donnelly, 2007
3
New Studies in Latin Linguistics: Selected Papers from the ...
A question remains: was it a denominative suffix which became deverbative or a
deverbative suffix extended to denominatives? 3. Denominative and semantics
The term "denominative" must be restricted to morphological uses; the meaning
of ...
4
Conversational Informatics: An Engineering Approach
This expression is transformed into 'deverbative noun + , and then modifying
words are changed properly according to the analysis result of the deverbative
noun. Cabinet large reform perform r ··· deverbative noun + noun is added to the
...
5
Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages
GZ *(s)a-zrd-el- 'food, subsistence': Georg. sazrdel- 'food, subsistence'; Megr.
ordal-. Deverbative formation widely attested in Old Georgian: sazrdelad misa iqo
mkali... 'his meat was locusts...' Mt 3.4. It is a former participle in circumfix *(s)a el
...
Georgiĭ Andreevich Klimov, 1998
6
Ancient Indo-European Dialects: Proceedings of the ...
-samo-, deverbative suffix -ti -\- d/n-, and so forth. But what we may call "negative"
innovations are equally important. We must always ask ourselves, what has the
given language restricted or eliminated? Celtic and Italic agree remarkably in ...
Henrik Birnbaum, Jaan Puhvel, 1966
7
Reconstructing Proto-Afroasiatic (Proto-Afrasian): Vowels, ...
It is not unreasonable to consider *w as having originally been a deverbative
complement and result marker, and its attributive application to have arisen
secondarily. An original shape *-aw- for this suffix is indicated by its attestations
in ...
8
Egyptian and Semito-Hamitic (Afro-Asiatic) Studies: In ...
... complement of a noun; c. deverbative object of action; d. deverbative attributive
; e. deverbative instrument/agent; and f. deverbative complement, forming inter
alia abstract nouns. The last of these usages (three cases of which are cited here
) ...
Werner Vycichl, Gâabor Takâacs, 2004
9
History of Linguistics Volume I: The Eastern Traditions of ...
verbal bases are either deverbative or denominative. For example, causatives
such as kr-i (—> lair-i: 3sg. pres. karayati [act.], karayate [mid.]) 'have . . . do, make
' and desideratives such as kr-sa (—> cikirsa: cikirsati, cikirsate) 'wish to do, ...
10
Features and Projections
(78) Chinookan habitual relatives: Discourse NP Underlying features functions
Surface clause features co-referent NP-A antipassive deverbative co-referent NP-
S deverbative co-referent NP-O(/D) finite relative+adverb Thus the deverbative ...
Pieter Muysken, Henk C. van Riemsdijk, 1986