Verb Subject Object - Verb Subject Object Verb Subject Object - commonly used in its abbreviated form \'VSO' - is a term in linguistic typology. It represents one type of languages when classifying languages according to the sequence of these constitutents in neutral expressions. The word order roughly corresponds to the order of symbols in (non-reverse) Polish notation or the S-expressions of the Lisp programming language. The other permutations according to importance Subject Object Verb (e.g. Japanese, Persian, Latin) Subject Verb Object (e.g. English, German, Kiswahili, Chinese) Verb Object Subject (e.g. Fijian) Object Subject Verb (e.g. Xavante) Object Verb Subject (rare).
Verb - Verb A verb is a part of speech. More specifically, a 'doing word' -- a word which describes an action (I go to London) or a state of being (I like ice cream, I think, therefore I am). Depending on the language, a verb generally varies in form according to many factors, possibly including its tense, aspect, mood (or "mode"), and voice, as well as the person, gender, and number of its subject. There are several major types of verbs. These include intransitive; transitive; ditransitive; and ergative, all of which types are marked in some of the world's languages. Caucasian languages not only mark verbs for ergativity, but also have ergative-absolutive noun case systems. Several languages spoken in Papua New Guinea mark verbs for transitivity, and.
Verb Object Subject - Verb Object Subject Verb Object Subject - commonly used in its abbreviated form VOS - is a term in Linguistic typology. It represents one type of languages when classifying languages according to the sequence of these constitutents in neutral expressions. Examples include Malagasy and Fijian. The other permutations according to importance: Subject Object Verb (e.g. Japanese, Persian, Latin) Subject Verb Object (e.g. English, German, Kiswahili, Chinese) Verb Subject Object (e.g. Welsh and Arabic) Object Subject Verb (e.g. Xavante and Apurina) Object Verb Subject (e.g. Hixkaryana).
Verb phrase - Verb phrase A verb phrase is a phrase whose head is a verb. A verb phrase consists of a verb, often one or two complements, and any number of adjuncts. Examples: saw the man through the window gave Mary a book See also: linguistics, syntax, X-bar theory.
Verbing - variations can be utilised. Some forms of verbing have been integrated into the English language proper, such as the noun "mail" being also utilised as a verb..
Verbal agreement - by verbs in a particular language. Essentially, verbal agreement is a construct whereby a verb used with a particular pronoun must take one form, and another form when used with another pronoun. French exhibits verbal agreement: in the phrase je suis I am, the verb être to be has agreement with the pronoun je I, and does not appear in the form être, but in the form suis. More transparently, manger to eat exhibits agreement with nous we/us in nous mangeons we eat. Verbal agreement allows a language to do away with pronouns: Spanish, for instance, no longer has need for free pronouns in sentences, even though French, its close relative, still does: the Spanish equivalent to the French je suis is soy, from an original form yo soy. Verbal agreement.
Intransitive verb - Intransitive verb In grammar, an intransitive verb is a verb that takes no object. Examples of intransitive verbs include: I ate. He thought. She runs. See also transitive and ditransitive. There are languages that mark verbs for their transitivity, such that the verb in "I ate" and "I ate a fish" would have different affixes. In addition, ergative verbs generally take complementizers, while normal intransitive verbs can take prepositional phrases. Thus: He thought that you were ill. She runs through the woods. But not He thought through the woods. She runs that you were ill..
Irregular verb - Irregular verb In contrast to regular verbs, irregular verbs are those verbs that fall outside the standard patterns of conjugation in the languages in which they occur. They mostly exist as remnants of historical spellings and conjugations. English Irregular verbs The irregularity of English verbs refers to its inconsistency in forming predictable past participles and/or past tenses. For all irregular verbs beside to be, other conjunctions and inflections follow the same rules of spelling as the regular verbs. English irregular verbs are native; they originate in Old English. In contrast, loanwords are regular. However, not all native English verbs are irregular. There are about 250 irregular English verbs, and they can be classified in a number of different ways: The remaining strong verbs, which display ablaut among.
Google (verb) - Google (verb) The verb to google is a neologism meaning "to perform a web search" (primarily with Google). This is a coined word, mainly due to the immense popularity of the search engine..
Eastern Armenian verb table - Eastern Armenian verb table The following is an Eastern Armenian verb table. The Western Armenian verb table can be found here: Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Conjugations 1.1 Affirmative/Interrogative 1.1.1 Type I/II 1.1.2 Type III 1.2 Negative 1.2.3 Type I Conjugations Affirmative/Interrogative Type I/II (This conjugation is termed "I/II" to coincide with historic/Western numbering, where there are still three distinct conjugations) Indicative Present Imperfect Preterite Future 1sg 2sg 3sg 1pl 2pl 3pl yes du na menk' duk' nrank' sirum em sirum es sirum ê sirum enk' sirum ek' sirum en sirum êi sirum êir sirum êr sirum êink' sirum êik' sirum êin sirec'i sirec'ir sirec' sirec'ink' sirec'ik' sirec'in sirelu yem sirelu yes sirelu ê sirelu yenk' sirelu yek' sirelu yen Perfect Pluperfect Fut. Perfect 1sg.
Ergative verb - Ergative verb In English language, an ergative verb is a verb whose action affects the subject, rather than the object, of the verb. Another way to describe this is that a normal verb's patient is its object, whereas an ergative verb's patient is its subject. Often, but not always, ergative verbs take no direct object. Some verbs can act as either a regular transitive verb or an ergative verb. Examples of ergative-only verbs: I think. I see. I understand. I experience. Examples of verbs that can be ergative or transitive: open The door opens. John opens the door. eat I ate. I ate a hamburger. See also: intransitive, transitive, ditransitive; compare to ergative case, nominative case..
Ditransitive verb - Ditransitive verb In grammar, a ditransitive verb is a verb which takes a subject and two objects (normally a direct object and an indirect object). Some examples of ditransitive verbs include: He gave Mary ten dollars. He passed Paul the ball. Jean read him the book. She is baking him a cake. You made me a liar Which can be written: He gave ten dollars to Mary He passed the ball to Paul Jean read the book to him She is baking a cake for him You made a liar of me In some cases the first form sounds wrong or at least unusual: He gave me it vs He gave it to me I reported you the problem vs I reported the problem to you We.
Defective verb - Defective verb A defective verb is a verb with an incomplete conjugation. Some defective verbs cannot be conjugated in certain tenses or moods; others can only be conjugated in the third-person singular, with an impersonal subject. Examples in English: can; ought (there is no infinitive "to can," for example) in French: pouvoir; gésir (there is no imperative "peux" or "puisse," for example) in Spanish: abolir (this is disputed, but some contend that there is no "él abole," for example) Defective verbs in English In the English language, there are few defective verbs. The only strictly defective verbs are "ought" and the modal auxiliary verbs, including: can/could may/might shall/should will/would must need (in the sense of, "it need not happen today") These verbs lack several forms. Most notably,.
Adverb - a distinct form from adjectives. Romance languages form adverbs by adding -mente (Spanish, etc) or -ment (French). In Esperanto, adverbs are not formed from adjectives but are made by adding -e directly to the word root. Thus, from bon are derived bone, "well", and bona, "good". Austronesian languages appear to form comparative adverbs by repeating the root (as in Wiki-Wiki), similarly to the plural noun. Examples The following examples are in English, because that is the language of this text. Examples in other languages may be added, especially to show language independent properties of adverbs. (1) In the following examples, the adverb, as a verb-modifier, is highlighted in bold. The verb that it modifies is shown in italics. It is tiring to run quickly. My sister laughs loudly. The sun shone.
Table (verb) - Table (verb) A table is a piece of furniture with a horizontal surface supported above the ground. One logical extension, namely use of to table, with the meaning to place on a table, is seldom used in a literal sense. Rather, it often evokes the imagined placement on a table of an (actual or figurative) document stating a proposal. Such placement could facilitate either examining or storing the document (and likewise the proposal embodied by it). Thus in deliberative bodies, "tabling" a proposed measure leaves room for contrary intentions; those bodies' rules of order, or simply accepted tradition, may specify which of these is implied. In fact, the meaning does vary among English-speaking countries: In British English, "to table" is applied to proposing the measure for consideration..
Armenian verbs - sir + e + -l] EA kardal/WA gartal (to read) [= kard/gart + a + -l] The endings reflect the number of conjugations possible. Western Armenian is conservative, retaining three conjugations: a, e, and i: I: sirel (to love) II: WA khôsil (to speak) III: EA kardal/WA gartal (to read) Eastern Armenian has collapsed WA conjugations I and II as /-el/: khosel (to speak) Stems There are two main stems per verb, the present stem and past stem. For conjugations I/II, the past stem is identical to the present stem, which is basically the verb minus the theme vowel and ending: sirel: pres/past sir- khôsil/khosel: pres/past khôs-/khos- The third conjugation has an augment, -ac' (sometimes -ec'): kardal/gartal: pres. kard-/gart-, past kardac'-/gartac'- Participles The number and type of participles varies by dialect..
Auxiliary verb - Auxiliary verb Auxiliary verbs are sometimes called helping verbs - they help the main verb that follows. English auxiliary verbs have the following classes of function: Passive, Progressive, Perfective, Modal, and Dummy. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 English Auxiliary Classes 1.1 Passive 1.2 Progressive 1.3 Perfective 1.4 Modal 1.5 Dummy 2 Properties 2.6 Negation 2.7 Inversion 2.8 Emphasis 2.9 Ellipsis 3 Other Languages 4 Reference English Auxiliary Classes Passive The verb be is used in the passive form to express an action where the subject is unknowable, not known, or of less interest than the action itself, e.g. the window is broken. (See also Grammatical voice.) Progressive This form, also known as the continuous form, uses the verb be. It is used to express the speaker's interpretation.
Katipunan - mga Anak ng Bayan (roughly translated as Exalted and Venerable Society of the Sons of the Nation). The Katipunan is also known by its acronym, KKK. The word katipunan is a Tagalog term for society, the root word being the verb tipon, which means to gather. Members of the society are bound by utmost secrecy. The final initiation rights to become a member involve writing their name in their own blood in a book. Some notable Katipuneros include, Andres Bonifacio, Emilio Aguinaldo, and Gregorio del Pilar..
Verner's law - with *b, *d, *g) occurred if they were non-initial and immediately preceded by a syllable that carried no stress in PIE. The original location of stress was often retained in Greek and early Sanskrit, though in Germanic stress eventually became fixed on the initial (root) syllable of all words. The crucial diference between *pH2te:r and *bhra:te:r was therefore one of second-syllable versus first-syllable stress (cf. Sanskrit pitá: versus bhrá:ta:). The *werT- *wurd- contrast is likewise explained as due to stress on the root versus stress on the inflectional suffix (leaving the first syllable unstressed). There are also other Vernerian alternations such as illustrated by Modern German ziehen (ge)zogen 'draw' < PGmc. *tiux- *tug- < PIE *déuk- *duk- 'lead'. There is a spinoff from Verner's Law: the rule accounts also for PGmc.
Vedea - which on 33 km the river is regulated. It flows in the Olt and Teleorman counties and the towns Alexandria and Roşiori de Vede are near the river. Vedea is the infinitive of the verb "to view" in Romanian..