Results 11 to 20 of about 411,823 (378)

Patterns of agreement within the Noun Phrase

open access: yesJournal of Portuguese Linguistics, 2013
We focuse on plural agreement within the Noun Phrase in urban varieties of Portuguese, in the light of Theory of Variation and Change assumptions (Weinreich, Labov, Herzog, 1968) and based on the speech of individuals with fundamental, medium and ...
Sílvia F. Brandão
doaj   +3 more sources

Revealing Transitive Verbs in Arabic Short Stories: A Case of Tagmemic Approach

open access: yesIzdihar, 2023
The study aimed to reveal transitive verbs, both active and passive monotransitive, in the Arabic short story “al-’Ajuz was al-’Ushfur” by Mahasin Jadu by using Kenneth L. Pike’s tagmemic theory, which consists of four elements.
abdul - basid   +3 more
doaj   +1 more source

Noun Phrase In Minang Language

open access: yesAksara, 2021
Phrase structure rules express the basic structural facts of the language in the form of “phrase markers”. This study discussed about the noun phrase in Minangkabau Language.
Akmal Akmal, Jamaluddin Nasution
doaj   +1 more source

Error Analysis on Noun Phrase in Students’ Undergraduate Theses

open access: yesEnglish Franca: Academic Journal of English Language and Education, 2022
The aim of this research is (1) to analyze the components of noun phrase errors that are often made by students in the introduction parts of their undergraduate theses, (2) to analyze the types of noun phrase errors that are often made by students in the
Tania Syafutri   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Type shifting and the number system in Persian [PDF]

open access: yesنشریه پژوهش‌های زبان‌شناسی, 2023
:The present article examines the structure of number phrase in Persian. It is also aimed at explaining the apparent lack of agreement between numerals and nouns in this language.
Amirmohammad Shirzad, Ali Darzi
doaj   +1 more source

From the world to word order: Deriving biases in noun phrase order from statistical properties of the world

open access: yesLanguage, 2020
:The world’s languages exhibit striking diversity. At the same time, recurring linguistic patterns suggest the possibility that this diversity is shaped by features of human cognition.
J. Culbertson, M. Schouwstra, S. Kirby
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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