A Functional Analysis of Present Day English on a General Linguistic BasisDe Gruyter, Incorporated, 1975 - 232 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 25
Page 39
... substantival or verbal suffixes ; moreover , the endings that are added to these suffixes are seldom indicative of the substantival or verbal character of the word concerned . It is well known that the only productive ending of English ...
... substantival or verbal suffixes ; moreover , the endings that are added to these suffixes are seldom indicative of the substantival or verbal character of the word concerned . It is well known that the only productive ending of English ...
Page 115
... substantival qualification ( Ty jsi hlupák : Ty jsi hloupý [ You are a block- head : You are stupid ] ) . Here again the substantival expression of the quality denotes something permanent , unlike the adjectival predicate , which ...
... substantival qualification ( Ty jsi hlupák : Ty jsi hloupý [ You are a block- head : You are stupid ] ) . Here again the substantival expression of the quality denotes something permanent , unlike the adjectival predicate , which ...
Page 136
... Substantival attribute The substantival attribute may be of two kinds : coordinate , i . e . apposi- tional attribute , which was treated in connection with the apposition , and subordinate , which does not formally agree with its ...
... Substantival attribute The substantival attribute may be of two kinds : coordinate , i . e . apposi- tional attribute , which was treated in connection with the apposition , and subordinate , which does not formally agree with its ...
Contents
A Functional onomatology | 17 |
a Definition of compound words | 28 |
Shortening of words and coining of new naming units | 34 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
2nd person adjective adverbial adverbial adjunct analysis apposition aspectual modification basic categorial transitions collocation colloquial common compared compounds construed corresponds Czech and German Czech sentence Czech verb Czech word Czech word order dative definition deixis denotes DEUTSCHBEIN English employs English verb example expressed fact finite verb formal French functional sentence perspective gender genitive gerund grammatical person grammatical subject Hence independent word Indo-European languages infinitive instances JESPERSEN jsem kind král language Latin linguistic Mathesius meaning ModE morpheme naming unit negation negative Neogrammarian nominal one-element passive construction passive predication periphrastic phonetic plural POLDAUF possessive Prague predication prefix prepositional phrase Present Day English present participle preterite pronominal pronoun reference reflexive reflexive pronoun reflexive verbs relation rheme semantic sentence element Similarly singular sometimes speaker speech substantival suffix syntactic tense theme tion utterance VACHEK verbal action verbal aspect verbal noun verbless sentences whereas word categories word order