「noun ſ」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 86件
in the semantic structure of Hindi: synonymous | nouns and adjectives with karana, Motilal Banarsidas |
hetic language and displays ergativity between | nouns and verbs. |
The adjectives are used before | nouns and also have masculine and feminine gender an |
ured many unusual words, foreign terms, proper | nouns and other specialist terms. |
plex with up to twenty morphemes, incorporated | nouns and unclear boundaries between morphemes. |
new forms of the person prefixes that occur on | nouns and verbs. |
he genitive singular of most strong declension | nouns and the masculine and neuter genitive singular |
words like pronouns and prepositions, but most | nouns and adjectives do not lose their final ‹n›. |
phonic combinations, technical words, signs of | nouns and verbs, numbers and indeclinables. |
of gender classification of indigenous Kannada | nouns and those inherited from Sanskrit (tadbhava-na |
age worshippers who are uncomfortable with the | nouns and pronouns in the liturgy and hymns that con |
apidly, and in a few short months she knew 200 | nouns and several verbs, including “run,” “jump,” an |
ties have to borrow Chinese verbs as Mongolian | nouns and then derive these to verbs. |
rds, numbers up to a million, pronouns, proper | nouns, and any words whose meaning can be communicat |
(2002) Lexical Categories: Verbs, | Nouns and Adjectives |
Human | nouns are consistently inflected for plurality, but |
The regular plural endings for | nouns are -s for a noun that ends in an unstressed r |
The plurals of | nouns are made with -en or, if a noun ends with an u |
ious other languages in which verbs as well as | nouns are masculine, feminine, or, in some instances |
Sumerian, Akkadian and Hittite languages, many | nouns are preceded or followed by a Sumerian word ac |
pant lower-case slang usage, where even German | nouns are downcased in many dewiki edit-summaries. |
Only | nouns are permitted. |
All German | nouns are capitalised. |
Personal markers in | nouns as well as in verbs were largely lost. |
PIE | nouns, as well as adjectives and pronouns, are subje |
's instrumental song "Impossible Bouquet" from | Nouns, before it segues into "Eraser". |
SA languages do not have many simple | nouns, but these nouns are the most ancient part of |
vastly more common pattern of other masculine | nouns but is very rarely heard in practice. |
Nouns can be divided into possessable and non-posses | |
Nouns can be divided into human and non-human classe | |
Any English verb, and even some | nouns, can be converted into a Tagalog verb by follo |
can) or take the copula (as na-adjectives and | nouns can), but must modify a noun or verb. |
Nouns change after the possessives hy (hers), ow (my | |
ut litanies of adjectives, geysers of abstract | nouns, chemical chains of relative clauses", dialogu |
In compound | nouns composed of two nouns, the tone of the first n |
Combinations of | nouns, determiners, and other parts of speech are co |
Nouns distinguish plurality, animacy, obviation, and | |
Other deverbal | nouns do not appear with a nominalizing enclitic, as |
Adjectives can also be joined with | nouns, e.g. |
h made to sound like Swedish, with many of the | nouns ending in "ska". |
Nouns ending in long-A (/aː/) are almost always femi | |
nouns following adjectives (N.B. most adjectives fol | |
are euro and cent; these are regular masculine | nouns forming their plurals with -s, as euros and ce |
changed grammatical forms, like adjectives and | nouns, from verb infinitive. |
The declension of male | nouns from singular, nominative termination '-on' to |
For example, the plural suffix for inanimate | nouns has as one of its forms /-an/ in all dialects |
Nouns have three genders: masculine, feminine, neute | |
Nouns have no gender, but the pronoun system disting | |
Nouns have plural and singular forms. | |
apes and forms; letters, spelling, rhymes, and | nouns; identifying, classifying, and sorting objects |
rm indicating izafa construction for masculine | nouns in the Kurmanji dialect of Kurdish. |
Nouns in Kyrgyz take a number of case endings that c | |
was delighted to learn that adjectives follow | nouns in Spanish, unlike in English, and made this t |
The Hebrew | nouns in the two accounts are different, one being m |
cal formations, similar to the way that verbal | nouns in English are formed unpredictably from diffe |
hort and grammatically simple sentences", "use | nouns instead of pronouns", "use determiners", and " |
The demonstrative pronoun always precedes the | nouns it refers to. |
from British spelling, such as in the case of | nouns like curb and tire, which in British English a |
Masculine and feminine | nouns may be distinguished suffix. |
There are five case markings for Baonan | nouns: Nominative, Accusative-Genitive, Dative-Locat |
The genitive case of other | nouns of masculine or neuter gender is formed by add |
The | nouns of the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE), the |
Since the nominative of Indo-European | nouns often ended in *-s and it seems to have been a |
a says that prepositions when not attached (to | nouns or verbs) do not express meanings ; but Gargya |
in this wide sense may be adjectives, adverbs, | nouns or, most commonly, interjections, or (rarely) |
inflectional system for masculine and feminine | nouns, pronouns and adjectives in the course of the |
After this reform, Dutch writing marked | nouns, pronouns, articles, and adjectives to disting |
Old English | nouns, pronouns, adjectives and determiners are decl |
Both languages have the dual for | nouns, pronouns, adjectives and verbs; very few know |
In | nouns, root final -a is often interpreted as an arti |
Content words ( | nouns, roots of verbs and adjectives) are generally |
(this rule is also true for feminine | nouns): short nouns normally have root+e, long nouns |
Masculine | nouns start with a-, i-, u- (in the singular) - like |
as a noun on its own, or as a part in compound | nouns such as Ersatzteile (spare parts) or Ersatzspi |
ant ndoo- arises from prefixed forms of Ottawa | nouns such as pwaagan ‘pipe,' corresponding to the f |
Nouns that refer specifically to human male and fema | |
ons" are really "postpositions", following the | nouns they refer to. |
oes not matter because of the declining of the | nouns to signify which part of speech that they are. |
Its three basic parts of speech are | nouns, verbs, and particles. |
accusative absolute is also found with plural | nouns where the ablative and accusative are not simi |
ither the masculine or the feminine gender for | nouns where Standard Yiddish uses the neuter. |
belonged to what are called ‘strong' Masculine | nouns, which usually ended in a consonant. |
but such a name would correspond to the ‘weak' | nouns which made their Genitive by adding not -es bu |
However, there are a very large number of | nouns with irregular plural morphology; irregular ma |
Nouns would look to the right for both subject and o | |
Nouns would look right to complete the subject link, | |
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