Results 181 to 190 of about 34,969 (230)
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American Speech, 1980
IN HIS EXEMPLARY OBITUARY "Albert Henry Marckwardt" (Language 52 [1976]: 667-81), Archibald A. Hill recalls his close association with Marckwardt when the two of them were young men at the University of Michigan fifty years ago and remarks, "I remember.., .his amusedly asking me about the past participle of stride: 'Is it stridden?"' Hill then goes on ...
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IN HIS EXEMPLARY OBITUARY "Albert Henry Marckwardt" (Language 52 [1976]: 667-81), Archibald A. Hill recalls his close association with Marckwardt when the two of them were young men at the University of Michigan fifty years ago and remarks, "I remember.., .his amusedly asking me about the past participle of stride: 'Is it stridden?"' Hill then goes on ...
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Past Participle Agreement in Old Spanish: Transitive Verbs
Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, 1967Mediaeval Spanish texts display a range of constructions which are formed by a present, past or future tense of the verb haber and the past participle of a transitive verb. In these constructions the direct object may precede or follow the participle; the participle sometimes agrees with the object, sometimes not: las batallas (que) ha vencidas/vencido,
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Causal sentences with past participle
The Humanities and Education, 2022Tatiana V. Nerusheva +1 more
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2011
Mòcheno, a German variety spoken in Trentino (Italy), displays an interesting case of phonologically conditioned suppletive allomorphy in past participle formation. Past participle formation involves a variety of strategies, from absence of a prefix, to affrication, to prefixing a CV-prefix ga-. I propose that two allomorphs are involved in the process,
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Mòcheno, a German variety spoken in Trentino (Italy), displays an interesting case of phonologically conditioned suppletive allomorphy in past participle formation. Past participle formation involves a variety of strategies, from absence of a prefix, to affrication, to prefixing a CV-prefix ga-. I propose that two allomorphs are involved in the process,
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