Results 31 to 40 of about 26,645 (219)

Person-marking in Máku

open access: yesLinguistic Discovery, 2021
In Máku (an extinct language isolate), person marking is encoded by pronominal elements that are attached to bound pronominal roots, possessed nouns, and as subject and object argument agreement reference on verbs. However, when the contrasts between the
Chris Rogers
doaj   +1 more source

Ini Apel Ni Nya ‘This Here Apple Now' Deictics in the Malay Speech of Southwest Malukan Migrants in the Netherlands1 [PDF]

open access: yes, 2008
Dialek Melayu yang dipakai para pendatang asal Maluku Selatan di Belanda inimemperlihatkan rangkaian demonstrativa dan endofora yang tidak ditemukandalam bahasa Indonesia baku.
Engelenhoven, A. V. (Aone)
core   +3 more sources

Klitik Klausa Pasif Bahasa Manggarai Dialek Barat Buha Aritonang

open access: yesBuletin Al-Turas, 2018
Clitics is one of the language systems retained in the Western dialect of Manggarai. The clitics in that language is a bound form that phonologically has no stress and its form can not be regarded as a bound morpheme. To analyze it is used clitics theory.
Buha Aritonang
doaj   +1 more source

The specifier–head relationship: negation and French subject proforms [PDF]

open access: yes, 2007
This article1 and the three others in this thematic collection are about heads and specifiers, the relationship between them, and how this relationship can change over time.
Adger   +56 more
core   +1 more source

Fossilization in Inflectional Morphemes by Persian Learners of English [PDF]

open access: yesTeaching English Language, 2007
This paper provides a cross-sectional study of the fossilized endstate L2 English grammar of freshmen and junior university students of English. Results are presented from spontaneous production and grammaticality judgment tasks of two groups of the ...
Ali Akbar Jabari
doaj   +1 more source

An HPSG approach to Welsh unbounded dependencies [PDF]

open access: yes, 2010
Welsh is a language in which unbounded dependency constructions involve both gaps and resumptive pronouns (RPs). Gaps and RPs appear in disjoint sets of environments. Otherwise, however, they are quite similar.
Borsley, RD
core  

Pronominal Subject Clitics in Igbo

open access: yesTheory and Practice in Language Studies, 2012
Pronominal elements in Igbo have been categorized into two types; the independent ones and the dependent, short, weak ones. Whereas the independent pronominal elements can occur both at the subject and object positions, the so-called dependent ones (which have also been analyzed as resumptive pronouns (Uwalaka, 1995)) are restricted to the subject ...
openaire   +1 more source

Metalinguistic Awareness in the EFL Classroom and Beyond: Exploring the Potential of Translation Tasks

open access: yesTESOL Quarterly, EarlyView.
Abstract Current trends encouraging a move away from monolingual teaching have sparked a renewed interest in the role of translation in language instruction. Yet, there are few theoretically and empirically grounded proposals regarding specific uses of translation in the language classroom.
Monika Bader   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

On the Nature of Clitics and Their Sensitivity to Number Attraction Effects

open access: yesFrontiers in Psychology, 2017
Pronominal dependencies have been shown to be more resilient to attraction effects than subject-verb agreement. We use this phenomenon to investigate whether antecedent-clitic dependencies in Spanish are computed like agreement or like pronominal ...
Mikel Santesteban   +3 more
doaj   +1 more source

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