Results 41 to 50 of about 9,405 (288)

The temporal role of eastern Bantu -ba and -li

open access: yesStudies in African Linguistics, 1986
In the eastern Bantu languages forms of the verb 'be', -ba and/or -I i , are commonly employed in complex constructions in which they take sentential{-like) complements.
Robert Botne
doaj   +3 more sources

The Silence of Heads

open access: yesStudies in Chinese Linguistics, 2016
On the basis of considerations involving complementizers, sentence-final particles, need, aspect, tense, focus and topic, agreement morphemes, determiners, verbrelated particles and adpositions, I reach the conclusion that many more heads in the ...
Kayne Richard S.
doaj   +1 more source

A binary system of complementizers in Cimbrian relative clauses [PDF]

open access: yes, 2012
The system of Cimbrian relative clauses manifests itself in a complex scenario: two different complementizers occur in this context: i) the ‘autochthonous’ (Germanic) bo, cognate of Southern German wo, and ii) the ‘allochthonous’ ke, borrowed from ...
Bidese, Ermenegildo   +2 more
core   +1 more source

Organoids in pediatric cancer research

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Organoid technology has revolutionized cancer research, yet its application in pediatric oncology remains limited. Recent advances have enabled the development of pediatric tumor organoids, offering new insights into disease biology, treatment response, and interactions with the tumor microenvironment.
Carla Ríos Arceo, Jarno Drost
wiley   +1 more source

On the Status of the Complementizer WAA6 in Cantonese [PDF]

open access: yesTaiwan Journal of Linguistics, 2006
Complementizers are generally known as function words that introduce a clausal complement, like that in English, for instance (Radford 1997). In many languages, complementizers are re-analyzed from verba dicendi, or verbs of ‘saying’ (Lord 1976 ...
Ka-Wai Yeung
doaj  

Relative Clauses in Upper Necaxa Totonac: Local, Comparative, and Diachronic Perspectives

open access: yesLinguistic Discovery, 2016
Relativization strategies in the Totonacan family are largely undescribed, but detailed examination of one of the languages in the group, Upper Necaxa Totonac, reveals the presence of both externally- and internally-headed relative constructions. Also of
David Beck
doaj   +1 more source

On negation in yes/no questions in Serbo-Croatian [PDF]

open access: yes, 2006
The phenomenon discussed in this paper is the so-called expletive negation in negated yes/no questions in Serbo-Croatian. The term expletive negation seems, at this point to be a useful descriptive term for the phenomenon in question. One of the goals of
Milicevic, Natasa
core  

Spatiotemporal and quantitative analyses of phosphoinositides – fluorescent probe—and mass spectrometry‐based approaches

open access: yesFEBS Letters, EarlyView.
Fluorescent probes allow dynamic visualization of phosphoinositides in living cells (left), whereas mass spectrometry provides high‐sensitivity, isomer‐resolved quantitation (right). Their synergistic use captures complementary aspects of lipid signaling. This review illustrates how these approaches reveal the spatiotemporal regulation and quantitative
Hiroaki Kajiho   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Noun complement clauses as referential modifiers

open access: yesGlossa, 2017
A number of recent analyses propose that so-called noun complement clauses should be analyzed as a type of relative clause. In this paper, I present a number of complications for any analysis that equates noun complement clauses to relative clauses, and ...
Carlos de Cuba
doaj   +2 more sources

Prosody as an argument for a layered left periphery [PDF]

open access: yes, 2017
Van Heuven and Haan’s (2000, 2002) experimental work on the prosody of Dutch question types found that the prosodic signalling of interrogativity is stronger for declarative questions, less so for yes/no-questions and even less so for wh-questions.
De Clercq, Karen
core   +2 more sources

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