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| | Grammatical person at opensource encyclopedia |
 | | Grammatical person, in linguistics, is used for the grammatical categories a language uses to describe the relationship between the speaker and the persons or things she is talking about. |  | | Grammatical person typically defines a language's set of personal pronouns. |  | | Grammatical person, in linguistics, is used for the grammatical categories a language uses to describe... |
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http://www.springknow.com/FP.html
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| | HLW: Grammatical Categories: Verb |
 | | With the verb be, there are three forms rather than two in the simple present, and rather than suffixes, completely unrelated forms are used: am (1st person singular), is (3rd person singular), and are (other person-number combinations). |  | | The grammatical representation of duration, completion, and repetition of events and states is known as aspect. |  | | As with other grammatical morphology, aspect morphology is often obligatory. |
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http://www.indiana.edu/~hlw/Inflection/verbs.html
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| | FrontPage magazine.com :: Chomsky's Linguistics Refuted by John Williamson |
 | | Note, however, that if the object of to get is grammatically expressed, then it must be the same as the logical object (See 4(c) above.) But Bob and his mother do not refer to the same person, so we have a logical impossibility. |  | | And perhaps that is really the point: if the Chomskyans had spent the past forty years trying to understand the difference between a grammatical sentence and an ungrammatical one, they might have had a great deal more to show for their effort. |  | | There are many people who would never say, Me went to the races. but who would nevertheless say, Me and Larry went to the races. According to Chomskyan precepts, both are grammatical because they both would seem to be intuitively correct to some speakers. |
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http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=16508
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| | Cohortative mood - TheBestLinks.com - Christianity, Genesis, Grammatical conjugation, Grammatical mood, ... |
 | | The cohortative mood (also known as Intentional; "cohortative subjunctive" is also synonymous with "hortatory subjunctive") is a grammatical mood, used to express plea, insistence, imploring, self-encouragement, wish, desire, intent, command, purpose or consequence. |  | | It is similar to the jussive mood, with the notable exception that the cohortative appears only in first person, whereas the jussive appears in second or third. |  | | While not found in modern Hebrew, the cohortative mood has an important role in Biblical Hebrew, where it was represented by a lengthened future form; namely adding the vowel 'ā' (adding of the letter ה) at the end of an already conjugated verb. |
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http://www.thebestlinks.com/Cohortative.html
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| | Grammatical tense - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Tense, along with mood, voice and person, are three ways in which verb forms are frequently characterized, in languages where those categories apply. |  | | Bybee, Joan L., Revere Perkins, and William Pagliuca (1994) The Evolution of Grammar: Tense, Aspect, and Modality in the Languages of the World. |  | | Grammatical tense is a way languages express the time at which an event described by a sentence occurs. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_tense
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| | inthemood.doc |
 | | For (14) to be true there must be at least one person who is in fact a politician and who would have been a crook in all possible worlds. |  | | The passage discusses a certain counterfactual course of history, namely one in which Kennedy would not have been killed. |  | | This situation prompted a new logical analysis of the modal fragment of English, according to which indicative predicates invariably pertain to the actual world, and only subjunctive predicates shift their extensions. |
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http://www.socsci.uci.edu/lps/home/fac-staff/faculty/wehmeier/inthemood.doc
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| | Grammatical gender - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | This does not mean they have genders in the grammatical sense. |  | | Gendered pronouns and their corresponding inflections vary considerably across languages: there are languages that have different pronouns and inflections in the third person only to differentiate between humans and inanimate objects, like Hungarian and Finnish. |  | | The noun lind (shield) is grammatically feminine, which forces the pronoun seo (the, that) and the adjectives brade (broad) and tilu (good) to appear in their feminine forms, as well as the pronoun hire (her), referring back to lind, which adopts the grammatical gender of the referent. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_gender
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| | Chapter 2: Language and the Objectification of Experience |
 | | For with the appearance of the grammatical third person the world was/is no longer directly engaged. |  | | The narrative 'mood', conceived as a structure for the representation of a time which is parallel to the present but not identical with it (nor even overlapping with it), appears to be eminently at home in the 'present' or in some modified representation of the 'present tense'. |  | | Thus, though the physical outcome may be the same, the direct relation between the killer, as grammatical subject, and the victim, as grammatical object, is effectively blocked as a cultural paradigm--this through the tiny preposition-like particle 'a' (in the phrase al hombre) which seems to specify, at most, the direction of the hostile venture. |
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http://www.saivo.com/book2.htm
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| | Glossary of Grammatical Terms |
 | | a grammatical construction in which two typically adjacent nouns referring to the same person or thing stand in the same syntactical relation to the rest of a sentence. |  | | asserting that the person or thing represented by the grammatical subject is subjected to or affected by the action represented by the verb. |  | | It is the grammatical center of a predicate. |
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http://www.cs.cf.ac.uk/fun/welsh/Glossary.html
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| | SEM1A5 - Part 2 - A Morphological Analyser |
 | | For practical NLP we usually require more information, such as the syntactic category (often known as the part-of-speech) and perhaps other information such as tense, number, grammatical person, etc. |  | | Transitions 8500/8501/9999 represents the present tense, third person singular form of the verb (eg trusts). |  | | This will be represented as another Prolog structured object, with five arguments (one for each of the above grammatical features, and one argument spare for later expansion). |
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http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~pjh/sem1a5/pt2/pt2_morph_analyser.html
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| | Glossary of Grammar and Syntax |
 | | These are pronouns which also convey grammatical person: 1st: ego, nos, etc.; 2nd, tu, vos, etc.; 3rd. |  | | Grammatically, the words cat's and song's are both in the possessive (aka genitive) case, but there's a different kind of relationship each has to the nouns they're going with. |  | | The subordinate clause is called the protasis (PHAH dah sis) and often contains the conjunction if or when, and the main clause is called the apodosis (ah PAH dah sis). |
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http://www.languages.uncc.edu/classics/latin/glossary.htm
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| | Glossary of Grammatical Terms |
 | | a grammatical construction in which two typically adjacent nouns referring to the same person or thing stand in the same syntactical relation to the rest of a sentence. |  | | asserting that the person or thing represented by the grammatical subject is subjected to or affected by the action represented by the verb. |  | | It is the grammatical center of a predicate. |
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http://www.cs.cf.ac.uk/fun/welsh/Glossary.html
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| | Grammatical conjugation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Conjugation may be affected by person, number, gender, tense, mood, voice, grammatical aspect, or other language-specific factors. |  | | This catagorisation tells us that we can conjugate any regular Latin verb to any person, number, tense, mood, and voice if we know which conjugation group it belongs to and some key forms called principal parts. |  | | In linguistics, grammatical conjugation is the creation of derived forms of a verb from the word root by inflection (regular alteration according to rules of grammar). |
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http://www.indexlistus.de/keyword/Grammatical_conjugation.php
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| | Grammatical conjugation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Conjugation may be affected by person, number, gender, tense, mood, voice, grammatical aspect, or other language-specific factors. |  | | In linguistics, grammatical conjugation is the creation of derived forms of a verb from the word root by inflection (regular alteration according to rules of grammar). |  | | The grammatical conjugation of an irregular verb forms a model for a genre of joke called the self-serving conjugation. |
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http://www.indexlistus.de/keyword/Grammatical_conjugation.php
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| | Conjunctivitis - allergic conjunctivitis |
 | | A disease is any abnormal condition of the body or mind that causes discomfort, dysfunction, or distress to the person affected or those in contact with the person. |  | | Grammatical veterinary how to treat allergic conjunctivitis conjunctivitis standard conjunctivitis canine human contagious treatment for the eye infection, conjunctivitis conjunction conjunctivitis in cattle conjunctivitis chronic conjunctivitis dog |  | | The broader body of knowledge about diseases and their treatments is medicine. |
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http://www.medicalgeo.com/Med-Diseases-Ci---Cy/Conjunctivitis.html
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| | Holy Fire Prayer Group |
 | | Every grammatical tense in the Greek language is further explained by its grammatical “moods.” The grammatical mood gives life to the past tense in this case. |  | | The subjunctive is the mood of “probability and possibility,” and its occurrence is conditional upon a person’s free will to make it happen. |  | | There is no possibility of its not coming to pass. |
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http://www.homestead.com/christianindiantv/files/CCC051603.htm
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| | Glossary of Grammatical Terms |
 | | a grammatical construction in which two typically adjacent nouns referring to the same person or thing stand in the same syntactical relation to the rest of a sentence. |  | | It is the grammatical center of a predicate. |  | | a class of grammatical forms used to denote more than one of some noun or pronoun. |
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http://www.cs.cf.ac.uk/fun/welsh/Glossary.html
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| | Linguistic Terms |
 | | See also aspect, conjugation, inflection, mood, person, tense. |  | | n : a grammatical case that denotes place or the place where or wherein. |  | | adj and n : asserting that the grammatical subject of a verb is subjected to or affected by the action represented by that verb. |
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http://www.orbilat.com/General_References/Linguistic_Terms.html
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| | Encyclopedia article on Grammatical conjugation [EncycloZine] |
 | | Conjugation may be affected by person, number, gender, tense, mood, voice, grammatical aspect, or other language-specific factors. |  | | In linguistics, grammatical conjugation is the creation of derived forms of a verb from the word root by inflection (regular alteration according to rules of grammar). |  | | The grammatical conjugation of an irregular verb forms a model for a genre of joke called the self-serving conjugation. |
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http://encyclozine.com/Conjugation_(grammar)
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| | Table of Contents |
 | | Although there were no statistically reliable differences between the SLI and DS groups on any morpheme measure, the groups were not comparably weak in their use of the regular past, -ed; the irregular third person singular morphemes (e.g., has, does); the present progressive, -ing; or the use of modals. |  | | The purpose of the present study was to examine the grammatical morphology and sentence imitation performance of two different groups of children with language impairment and to compare their performance with that of children learning language typically. |  | | Exploratory analyses were completed on a set of 11 individual grammatical morphemes as a follow-up to the principal analyses. |
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http://www.asha.org/about/publications/journal-abstracts/jslhr/45/04?articleabstract=720
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| | Analyzing English Grammar (pt.IV) |
 | | Of course, by simply changing a Present (=Pres(ent) 3 (Person) Sing(ular)) inflection to a Past Inflection [+Past] (a feature selection as controlled by the Tense node under Aux) we would get had run/used/written (respectively). |  | | This type of grammatical construction often gives one the impression of having a dual tense since it is possible to denote a quasi present-past or past-past reference to grammatical time. |  | | (1) There seems to arise a general grammatical framework that stipulates what kinds of words can sit amongst other words. |
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http://www.csun.edu/~galasso/completehandbook4.htm
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| | Mood |
 | | A person's mood is a measurable affective state, which can consist of a combination of emotions. |  | | However, given the temporal fluctuations in mood on the job, such between-persons approaches... |  | | It also seems likely the anxiety disorders are related to mood disorders. |
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http://hallencyclopedia.com/Mood
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| | Search Results for pronoun - Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Grammatical categoriessuch as number, gender, case, person, tense, mood, voiceare almost absent from pidgin and creole languages, as from many other languages of the world. |  | | Worksheet on the grammatical usage of interrogative and relative pronouns in Latin. |  | | As for the inflection, there may have been only two cases of the noun in Old Egyptian. |
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http://www.britannica.com/search?query=pronoun&submit=Find&source=MWTEXT
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| | Grammatical particle - |
 | | In general, it is understood that particles are function words that tend to be uninflected — that is, words which do not have suffixes, for example, that reflect grammatical gender, tense or person. |  | | However, the term may have a broader definition. |  | | Sentence connectors, tags or tag questions (also called sentence-finals), and conjunctions connect to what has been said in a previous clause or sentence. |
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http://psychcentral.com/psypsych/Grammatical_particle
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| | Barbelith Underground > Head Shop > Sex and Gender, Man and Woman, Male and female |
 | | So, to pick a very obvious example, when you refer to a transvestite friend in drag as "she", you are altering the grammatical term by which the person is connoted, presumably in reference to the gender *role* they are adopting, and irregardless of any change in what they have in their pants. |  | | A grammatical category used in the classification of nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and, in some languages, verbs that may be arbitrary or based on characteristics such as sex or animacy and that determines agreement with or selection of modifiers, referents, or grammatical forms. |  | | Otherwise, gender is a grammatical and cultural identifier. |
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http://www.barbelith.com/topic.php?id=9733
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| | Person - Cambridge University Press |
 | | By looking at different types of person forms in the grammatical and social contexts in which they are used, this book documents an underlying unity between them, arguing against the treatment of person markers based on arbitrary sets of morphological and syntactic properties. |  | | This textbook deals with the grammatical category of person, which covers the first person, the second person, and the third person. |  | | She shows how person forms vary in substance, in the nature of the semantic distinctions they convey, in how they are used in sentences and discourse, and in the way they function to convey social distinctions. |
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http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521776694
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| | ot.paper.rtf |
 | | In the active candidate, the 3rd person agent is subject (indicated as: Agt/Su/3), and the 1st person patient is direct obje ct (Pat/Oj/1); in the passive, the patient is subject (Pat/Su/1) and the agent is syntactically oblique (Agt/Obl/3). |  | | The evaluation of a clause with 3rd person agent/1st person patient, where the patient is specified in the input as thematically prominent (X), is shown in Tableau 2. |  | | The person scale ranks the local per sons (first and second) with respect to third, but does not rank first and second with each other.{\fs18\up6 \chftn {\footnote \pard\plain \s246 \f20\fs20 {\plain \f20\up6 \chftn }{\plain \f20 DeLancey (1981) argues that 1st and 2nd person are not universally ranked. |
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http://people.ucsc.edu/~aissen/ot.paper.rtf
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| | Romanika |
 | | In Brazil, as I have stated on previous posts, the grammatical second person pronouns and their verbs forms have disappeared from the written and spoken languages, though these can often be seen in poetry and religious texts. |  | | If we add to this the fact that the other grammatical persons are involved as well, we end up with a word order that is much stricter and rigid. |  | | In the second part, however, we see te, which is grammatically second-person, used with the other pronouns which are third-person, together mixed to reference semantically second-person. |
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http://romanika.blogspot.com/2004/07/second-person-in-portuguese.html
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| | Grammatical Shift For The Rhetorical Purposes: Iltifat And Related Features In The Qur'an |
 | | Since no distinction is shown in contemporary English between singular, dual and plural second person pronouns, in translations of such Qur'ānic passages the shift may go unobserved and its effect be lost. |  | | This is not a matter of personal taste or opinion; it is clear from the rest of the verse which goes on to emphasize the point and describe the garden: 'whose trees you could never cause to grow'. |  | | By merely using the 3rd person at the beginning, God is already expressing displeasure at what the Prophet did and upbraiding him before all listeners; turning to the 2nd person after that is in itself a reprimand; the shift is sudden and powerful. |
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http://www.islamic-awareness.org/Quran/Text/Grammar/iltifaat.html
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| | Mastering POV |
 | | Third-person unlimited, also known as the omniscient point of view since the author is considered godlike, written in grammatical third person: he, she, it, they |  | | Third-person limited, one version of which is also called the fly-on-the-wall or the camera point of view, also in grammatical third person |  | | By putting yourself in the victim’s place and writing from his perspective – but using the grammatical third person rather than switching to first-person point of view—you will gain more insight into the psyches of your crime-fighters as well." |
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http://www.absolutewrite.com/novels/mastering_pov.htm
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