Results 71 to 80 of about 15,114 (291)
Change of State Head-Internal Relative Clauses in Japanese
P(論文)Japanese exhibits another type of head-internal relative clause (HIRC), which has not been discussed carefully in the literature. I call it the "change of state head-internal relative clause (change-HIRC)" for its semantic character.
外崎, 淑子 +3 more
core
The Relative Clause and the Verb in Middle Egyptian
It is argued that the proposed reanalysis of the circumstantial sdm(.f)/sdm. n(.f) as the unconverted/non-transposed forms of the simple suffix conjugation, i.e.
Mark Collier
core +1 more source
ABSTRACT The emerging concept of Hubs for Circularity (H4Cs) presents an opportunity to create collaborative, self‐sustaining regional industrial ecosystems that drive circular economy transitions at scale. However, the operationalisation of H4Cs faces financial, organisational and data‐driven challenges.
Aditya Tripathi +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Superlative syntactic amalgams in an Iberian Spanish dialect
This article addresses an as yet unnoticed Spanish superlative construction attested in the mid area of Northern Spain. This construction features two striking properties: (i) it contains a relative pronoun which, at first glance, does not seem to ...
Luis Ángel Sáez del Álamo
doaj +1 more source
Nominalization and focus constructions in some Kiranti languages
It is well-known that in many if not most Sino-Tibetan languages relative clause and attribute/genitive markers are identical with nominalization devices and that sentences bearing such markers can also function as independent utterances (cf.
Bickel, Balthasar
core
Conditional Sentences: ELT typology and corpus evidence. [PDF]
This paper presents the findings of a pilot study examining the representation of the typology of conditional sentences presented in English language teaching (ELT) materials (coursebooks and grammars) in a random sample of 1,000 conditional sentences ...
Gabrielatos, Costas +1 more
core
Clause boundaries in Old Hittite relative sentences
Hittite relative sentences typically take the form 'CONJUNCTION whichever slaves have run awat, CONJUNCTION those we shall recover'. The first part ('CONJ...away') is known as the relative clause and the second ('CONJ...recover') as the resumptive clause.
Probert, Philomen +2 more
core +1 more source
ABSTRACT As global environmental concerns intensify, firms are increasingly expected to embed environmental responsibility into their core strategies. However, uncertainty remains over whether eco‐friendly initiatives are economically rewarded, reflecting ambiguity in consumers' true environmental preferences.
Kimitaka Nishitani +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Harmony, Head Proximity, and the Near Parallels between Nominal and Clausal Linkers
This paper puts forward a notion of harmonic word order that leads to a new generalisation over the presence or absence of disharmony: specific functional heads must cross-linguistically obey this notion of harmony absolutely, while for other categories ...
Philip, J
core
Mean target detection amplitude (TDA) for the relative-clause structures.
Mean target detection amplitude (TDA) averaged over all participants for the relative-clause structures of the OLACS. The shaded areas illustrate the 95% confidence intervals for each curve.
Birger Kollmeier (581047) +2 more
core +1 more source

