Results 201 to 210 of about 170,238 (263)

Epidural cell therapy reduces neurological sequelae severity in canine distemper survivors. [PDF]

open access: yesStem Cell Res Ther
Cardoso do Prado Bayma J   +3 more
europepmc   +1 more source

On Null Subjects and Null Arguments

Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue canadienne de linguistique, 1993
In the literature on Null Subject Languages (NSLs) since Rizzi (1982), the three properties that are commonly thought to be connected are (i) the richness of inflectional morphology, (ii) free subject inversion, and (iii) the COMP-trace effect. The connection between them is that if a language (e.g., Italian) has the option of having a null subject (NS)
openaire   +1 more source

Early Null Subjects and Root Null Subjects*

1994
Around the age of 2, children freely drop subjects, irrespective of whether or not the target language is a null subject language. L. Haegeman noticed that the root character of subject drop suggests a topic-drop-type analysis, involving a discourse-bound null operator in the matrix SPEC of C binding a variable in subject position.
openaire   +1 more source

Null Subjects

2016
Some languages have obligatory overt subjects in all person and tense combinations (e.g., English); some have optional overt subjects in all combinations (e.g., Italian; Chinese); some are mixed (e.g., Hebrew, Shipibo). Parameter setting is less workable an explanation for language variation than is a feature approach.
openaire   +1 more source

Null subjects

2019
After a brief historical sketch of work on null subjects, and a summary of Barbosa’s proposals concerning the relation between partial and radical null subjects, the chapter presents a typology of null arguments which links their properties directly to the D-system, suggesting a cross-linguistic link between the nature of the null-subject system and ...
openaire   +1 more source

Null Subjects

1997
Abstract Hebrew is often classified as a “semi” pro drop or null subject language. This is due to the fact that the distribution of referential null subjects cuts across the verbal paradigm in a rather unique fashion: Null subjects are admitted in conjunction with first and second person, but not with third person inflection.
openaire   +1 more source

Null Subjects in Gothic

American Journal of Germanic Linguistics and Literatures, 2000
Several kinds of systematic deviations from the Greek original, including simple insertions and omissions of subject pronouns and transformations of nonfinite or impersonal Greek constructions into personal finite clauses, provide evidence concerning the distribution of null and overt referential subject pronouns in Gothic. While the evidence leaves no
openaire   +1 more source

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