Spécial | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | Tout
A |
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adjectivea class of word which is generally used to describe or modify a noun, such as cat; e.g. a sleepy small furry brown cat. | |
aspectgrammatical information contained in the verb phrase about the duration of an action; for example I was walking in contrast to I walked. | |
auxiliary verba part of the verb phrase, separate from the lexical verb, which carries information about tense, mood and aspect. See page 67. | |
B |
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bound morphemea type of morpheme (such as -ed or -tion) which cannot stand on its own but must be attached to a free morpheme (such as pollute, to produce polluted, or pollution). See also derivational morpheme and inflectional morpheme. | |
C |
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classa term which can be used generally to mean a group of similar things. See word class for a specific linguistic use of this term | |
clausea grammatical unit containing a main verb. A sentence has to contain at least one clause. There are various kinds of clauses. A main clause is one which contains a main | |
clausesA clause is defined as an expression which contains (at least) a subject and a predicate, and which may contain other types of expression as well (e.g. one or more complements and/or adjuncts). In most cases, the predicate in a clause is a lexical main verb, so that there will be as many different clauses in a sentence as there are different lexical verbs. | |
complement:This is a term used to denote a specific grammatical function. A complement is an expression which is directly merged with a head word, thereby projecting the head into a larger structure of essentially the same kind. In ‘close the door’, the door is the complement of the verb close; in ‘after dinner’, dinner is the complement of the preposition after; in ‘good at physics’, at physics is the complement of the adjective good; in ‘loss of face’, of face is the complement of the noun loss. As these examples illustrate, complements typically follow their heads in English. Thus, a complement has a close morphological, syntactic and semantic relation to its head. | |
D |
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declarative:
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