Finnish partitive constructions exhibit a case alternation that is partly semantically, partly syntactically driven. |
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And much of the literature in interactional linguistics is very syntactically oriented rather than morphosyntactically oriented. |
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The genitive would function syntactically as subjective genitive with the transactional term o-pa. |
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Complex, enjambed sentences and syntactically sophisticated indirect speech reveal the possibilities open to the poet of written, rather than oral, epic. |
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The result is more fluent prosodically, though incoherent syntactically. |
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Well, there are no syntactically incoherent sentences, anyhow. |
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Interestingly, the modal verb bì appears below the scope of negation and thus patterns with circumstantial modals syntactically. |
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And I noticed the paragraphs on the cards were syntactically far more complicated than anything he read in books. |
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In the context of disjunctive poems and syntactically difficult passages, this relative clarity allows us to relax, even as these stories distress us. |
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That could not possibly ever be true, but if it is syntactically correct the program will compile successfully. |
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Scheme is a language related to Lisp which allows you to code particularly light and syntactically simple scripts. |
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An acknowledgement that notifies the sender that CBSA has received the message and the message was syntactically correct. |
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Every change to the structure of a feature affects the decision tree. Check that the decision tree is syntactically correct. |
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If the entry is syntactically correct, the change will appear in the source text. |
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When you define a substitution rule, the system checks the substitution rule to ensure that it is syntactically correct. |
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The modal 必 bì differs considerably from the modal verbs discussed above both semantically and syntactically. |
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In this case, the class of character strings is the set of messages which can be called a syntactically valid ADEXP message. |
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This means that only syntactically correct condition records make it into posting. |
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Check whether the changes in the decision tree are syntactically correct for the feature. |
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Although the execution implies a validation, it is faster to syntactically check the expression without executing it. |
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You cannot set the status to 'Released' until you have written syntactically correct source code. |
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If the source text of a decision tree is changed, you must always check that it is syntactically correct. |
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Focus may be highlighted either prosodically or syntactically or both, depending on the language. |
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Appositive relative clauses are often claimed to be more or less syntactically independent of the head noun. |
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In response, as Dr Liberman notes, many offending websites have hired computational linguists to churn out syntactically correct but meaningless verbiage including common search terms. |
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We should not admit categorial restrictions on the significance of syntactically well-formed strings. |
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However, in many languages, including Maltese, 'give' is syntactically a very atypical ditransitive verb. |
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The possessives and demonstratives that appear with the article i may be analyzed in a quick and obvious way: as syntactically adjectives rather than determiners. |
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As such, it's the most straightforward way, syntactically speaking, for a coach, boss or bureaucrat to seem to be admitting something went wrong while not putting themselves, or any other human, on the line. |
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Yet it does matter whether one is presented with an original Rembrandt or with a copy of it, since paintings are analogs, symbols in syntactically dense systems. |
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But whatever the strategy and level of involvement, it should be noted that keywords must be in the text and in natural phrases, syntactically well formed. |
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The neuter gender of classical Latin was in most cases absorbed by the masculine both syntactically and morphologically. |
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Argument structure is thus considered to be part and parcel of the information associated with lexical, syntactically atomic verbs. |
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An affix syntactically and phonologically attaches to a base morpheme of a limited part of speech, such as a verb, to form a new word. |
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In The casserole cooked in the oven, cooked is syntactically active but semantically passive. |
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Exchanging clinical data is an enormous challenge both semantically and syntactically. |
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Likewise, the basilectal phrase to make dirty is realigned as to make dirt, which is syntactically standardish without being a standard English idiom. |
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An infinitive form, that uses the plain form of the verb and the preposition to, is used for verbal clauses that are syntactically subordinate to a finite verbal clause. |
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Despite the differences in the Hymn found in the Old English manuscripts, each copy of the hymn is metrically, semantically, and syntactically correct. |
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For example, the subjunctive and optative moods in Ancient Greek alternate syntactically in many subordinate clauses, depending on the tense of the main verb. |
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Direct Answers for the Enterprise works by parsing a users' initial query, and analyzing it syntactically and semantically in a process that takes milliseconds. |
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It allows certain kinds of syntactically discontinuous expressions. |
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In some languages, for example, Chinese, there are no morphological processes, and all grammatical information is encoded syntactically by forming strings of single words. |
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In fact, even within the northern Italian dialects, subject clitics do not constitute a syntactically uniform class, as has been convincingly argued in Poletto's work. |
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The texts, which were displayed as typed pages or as wall drawings, are structurally and syntactically akin to Surrealist automatic writing and to Concrete poetry. |
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Syntactically identical questions can be semantically different. |
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