Results 1 to 10 of about 8,886 (65)
Anaphore possessive et anaphore associative : le cas des noms collectifs [PDF]
This paper is devoted to some anaphoric operations which are specific to the collection-member relation (e.g., regiment/soldiers, caravan/camels, forest/trees).
Mathilde Salles
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Anaphore associative et anaphore possessive [PDF]
This paper is devoted to associative anaphora and possessive anaphora with two kinds of nouns. One is meronyms, where a noun denotes a concept that is a part of another as in trunk/tree. The other is what I call “functionally localized” nouns, such as church with respect to village, where the latter denotes a concept that normally implies the existence
M. Salles
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Foisonnement nominal et coréférence dans le texte spécialisé
Comparé au roman et au récit de voyage littéraire, l’écrit soigné en langue spécialisée se caractérise généralement par une plus grande proportion de substantifs, d’adjectifs et de prépositions, au détriment des catégories verbales et pronominales. Cette
Marc Van Campenhoudt
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The Use of Jordanian Arabic Possessive Pronouns by Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Aim. This study aimed to investigate the use of different Jordanian Arabic possessive pronouns by children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and explore the influence of their IQ on the usage of possessive pronouns and possessive adjectives.
Razan N. Alkhatib, A. R. Altakhaineh
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Possessive pronouns in Russian-German language contact: variation or change?
The article addresses the question of what happens to internal linguistic variability in a language contact situation by looking at how first-generation Russian immigrants in Germany use two variants of possessive pronouns (reflexive and non-reflexive ...
T. Perevozchikova
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In this article I (t)race the (onto)epistemological intimacies of the urban frontier through their attempted erasure and annihilation of the Bla(c)k, Indigenous and racialised (m)other and her rendition to non-being and non-belonging in the city of ...
S. Motta
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Rules and exceptions: A Tolerance Principle account of the possessive suffix in Northern East Cree.
Debate around inflectional morphology in language acquisition has contrasted various rule- versus analogy-based approaches. This paper tests the rule-based Tolerance Principle (TP) against a new type of pattern in the acquisition of the possessive suffix
Ryan E. Henke
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The interaction of morphosyntactic features has been of great interest in research on linguistic complexity. In this paper we approach such interactions in possessive noun phrases.
Kaius Sinnemäki, Viljami Haakana
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Possessive pronominal anaphor resolution in Portuguese written texts [PDF]
This paper describes a proposal for Portuguese possessive pronominal anaphor (PPA) resolution, a problem little considered so far. Particularly, we address the problem of Portuguese 3rd person intrasentential PPAs seu/sua/seus/suas (his/her/their/its, for human and non-human subjects in English), which constitute 30% of pronominal occurrences in our ...
Ivandré Paraboni +1 more
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Dutch Anaphoric Possessive Construction
The Dutch anaphoric possessive construction (APC), as exemplified by Tom zijn fiets ‘Tom his bike’, shows a peculiar mix of regularity and idiosyncracy. The article provides a theory-neutral description of its properties and quantitative information about its use in two treebanks, one of spoken Dutch (CGN) and one of written Dutch (Lassy Small).
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