Essentials of English GrammarUniversity of Alabama Press, 1964 - 387 Seiten A classic of English grammar, Essentials of English Grammar provides a common ground for the traditionalist and the structural or descriptive linguist. Jespersen's work provides insight into the fundamental concepts that underlie the linguistic approach, but at the same time the foundation of the traditional approach is retained. |
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Seite 97
Otto Jespersen. CHAPTER X SENTENCE - STRUCTURE - Subject and predicate . Object.- Word - order . -Inversion . —— Amorphous sentences . 10.11 . In such a simple sentence as the dog barks - and naturally also in clauses like that the dog ...
Otto Jespersen. CHAPTER X SENTENCE - STRUCTURE - Subject and predicate . Object.- Word - order . -Inversion . —— Amorphous sentences . 10.11 . In such a simple sentence as the dog barks - and naturally also in clauses like that the dog ...
Seite 98
... sentences ? If he hears a sentence like " John saw Henry , " it is , of course , necessary for him at once to know who was the seer and who was seen . How is this effected ? 10.2g . Some pronouns have different forms - case - forms ...
... sentences ? If he hears a sentence like " John saw Henry , " it is , of course , necessary for him at once to know who was the seer and who was seen . How is this effected ? 10.2g . Some pronouns have different forms - case - forms ...
Seite 309
... sentence ) , a dependent nexus forms only a part of a sentence , and thus may be either a primary in a sen- tence ( subject or object ) , a secondary ( an adjunct ) to a primary in a sentence , or a tertiary in a sentence . A dependent ...
... sentence ) , a dependent nexus forms only a part of a sentence , and thus may be either a primary in a sen- tence ( subject or object ) , a secondary ( an adjunct ) to a primary in a sentence , or a tertiary in a sentence . A dependent ...
Inhalt
CHAPTER I | 15 |
CHAPTER II | 22 |
EVOLUTION OF THE SOUNDSYSTEM | 29 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjectives adjunct adverbs amorphous sentences auxiliary barks CHAPTER chiefly colloquial combinations Compare compounds connexion consonant construction corresponding definite denote Dickens diphthongs distinction English examples expressed felt fool French frequent genitive gerund grammatical H. W. Fowler idea indefinite article indicated indirect object infinitive interrogative intransitive Jane Austen John kind king lady language live look married mass-words meaning mentioned names natural negative never nexus nexus-substantives Note one's originally participle passive perfect phonetic pluperfect plural possessive pronoun possible predicative prepositional group present preterit primary pronouns prop-word question reference regard relative clause relative pronoun secondary seen sense set phrases Similarly singular sometimes sound speak speaker speech spelling stantive stress substantive superlative syllable tendency tertiary Thackeray thing third person thou transitive verbs verb voiceless vowel woman word-order words writing