Examples
- I was driving along, empty of thought, when my eye caught a FOR SALE sign at the front of a Bondi block. 'Funky one-bedder. High ceilings, polished So gradability is grammaticised. We have "pretty", "prettier" and "prettiest" for straight semantics, but to grasp the nuance, we usually need. — “Goodness; it's a sliding scale - BooksWords - .au”, .au
- So far, all I've thought of is that "apparently" could be grammaticised into a sort of hearsay particle, marking information the speaker has only heard or read. A few questions: • What do you think would be a plausible reduced form of "apparently". — “Conlang: Evidentials for a future English (Estel Telcontar”,
- 1. (noun) Badly grammaticised insult for a bit of a knob end, often ascribed to those of the ginger persuasion. — “Urban Dictionary: Smell-dick”,
- grammaticised on the verb (Arabic, English, Spanish, for example) are conceptualiser language specific, and what role do grammaticised meanings. play in guiding the decisions which speakers make when selecting and. — “The language and thought debate: a psycholinguistic approach”, idf.uni-
- in nonstandardized varieties grammaticised non-agreeing object ***ics promote split marking Leísmo together with the grammaticised differential object marker a pushes the dative (IO). — “***ics on the move: from dependent marking to split marking”, lingfest.arts.usyd.edu.au
- Previous findings: speakers of a L1 in which a concept is grammaticised Further questions: Do grammaticised meanings also have an impact on. — “The Role of Grammatical Aspect in the Acquisition of Tense”, userpage.fu-
- 13(thir***) letter words ending with d: absquatulated,adminiculated,administrated,adverbialised,adverbialized,aestheticised,aestheticized,allopolyploid,anaesthetised,anaesthetized,anaphylactoid,anathematised,anathematized,antiapartheid,anti grammaticised. — “13(thir***) letter words ending with d”,
- Grammaticised forms underlying information structure: English and Dutch narratives and event descriptions compared Grammaticised forms underlying information structure: English and Dutch narratives and event descriptions compared. — “Call for Papers Anéla/ Viot Juniorendag 2011”,
- 2.2 Prepositions vs adjectives 606. 2.3 Prepositions vs verbs 610. 2.4 Prepositions vs adverbs 612. 3 Idiomatic and fossilised 6 Grammaticised prepositions 647. 6.1 Meanings of prototypical prepositions 647. 6.2 Syntactic uses of grammaticised prepositions. — “Prepositions and preposition phrases”,
- Introduction to Linguistics (Notes on 2008 Summer Intensive taught by Justin Nuger) e.g. Creole (results from a Pidgin becoming fully grammaticised). — “Introduction to Linguistics (Notes on 2008 Summer Intensive”,
- Words starting with gr: graal,graals,grab,grabbable,grabbed,grabber,grabbers,grabbier,grabbiest,grabbiness,grabbinesses,grabbing,grabble,grabbled,grabbler,grabblers,grabbles,grabbling,grabby,graben,grabens,grabs,grace,graced grammaticised. — “Words starting with gr”,
- Grammaticised forms underlying information structure: Hurdles for advanced German and Grammaticised forms underlying information structure: Hurdles for advanced learners in. — “NWO”,
- Some concepts are grammaticised in the Fijian pronoun system that are not Some grammaticised concepts in the English pronominal system are not. — “PROF. MARCUS KRACHT: LING 20. WINTER 2007”, humnet.ucla.edu
- (1) I wol [NegP non answeri [VP yeve hym ti ] ] Paston D 600, 34 (1460) Evidence of the phenomenon is predicted to become available earlier than this; already in the 14th century not had become generally grammaticised in Spec NegP (Frisch 1997, van Kemenade 2000, Ingham 2004). — “Spec NegP as a site of Neg Movement in Middle English: 14th”,
- reveals that the learners operate on grammaticised semantic distinctions drawn from the target language. suggests that the learner language is a linguistic system, in which grammaticised semantic distinctions drawn. — “On the use of posture verbs by French-speaking learners of”, linguistics.berkeley.edu
- Firstly, it compares different linguistic systems with respect to specific grammaticised categories, showing how these categories relate to patterns of information organisation at text level, with the of information organisation which grammaticised forms entail in the. — “IngentaConnect Linguistic structure and information”,
- grammaticised facial expression [raised head and furrowed eyebrows] was. used in half of the sentences without any wh-question signs (Liddell, 1980; accuracy for the signed and grammaticised facial markers did not differ as. — “Grammatical processing in American Sign Language: Age of first”, grammar.ucsd.edu
- So de-grammaticised/ungrammaticised forms such as the lovely account non-exists' – as I Perhaps it's not so much de-grammaticised as pre-grammar. In the Shanghai metro, a guy. — “Anticipating the effect of the rise of China on EIL by”,
- If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks. Subject and object agreement for honorific vs. plain is grammaticised - 'Huruyama-kun ga kaimasu' vs. 'Huruyama-sensei ga okai-ni. — “Talk:Agreement (linguistics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia”,
- of prepositions to their grammaticised use, which is for prepositions to The first by is clearly grammaticised, it is used merely to introduce the agent. — “***ta ou le Désir déternité”,
- We are all familiar with "de-grammaticised" utterances of this type: Newspaper headlines are good for this, since they are, essentially, de-grammaticised sentences:. — “From words to grammar”,
- A free online Talking English Pronunciation Dictionary - simply mouse over your entry to hear it pronounced. American and British spellings, with alternative pronunciations. Sounds are fast, clear and completely natural, pre-recorded by native grammaticised. — “Pronunciation of grammaticalise - how to pronounce”,