enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mortlockese language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortlockese_language

    Some nouns also indicate the specific use for the object in question, including the nature of how it is to be used by the subject in a sentence. Nouns can be modified by adjectives, demonstratives, and numeral classifiers and modified nouns will usually undergo vowel lengthening from (C)(V)(C) to (C)(V)(V)(C). Types of nouns in Mortlockese ...

  3. Genitive construction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genitive_construction

    A genitive construction involves two nouns, the head (or modified noun) and the dependent (or modifier noun). In dependent-marking languages, a dependent genitive noun modifies the head by expressing some property of it. For example, in the construction "John's jacket", "jacket" is the head and "John's" is the modifier, expressing a property of ...

  4. Upper Kuskokwim language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_Kuskokwim_language

    Nouns are divided into two classes: those which can be possessed, but do not have to be (such as clothing, animals and lake names) and those which are always possessed (such as body parts). For the former group, some nouns that are possessed have a change in spelling and pronunciation when they are possessed.

  5. Grammatical modifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_modifier

    (adjective modifying a noun, in a noun phrase) [The swiftly flowing waters] carried it away. (adjectival phrase, in this case a participial phrase, modifying a noun in a noun phrase) She's [the woman with the hat]. (adjectival phrase, in this case a prepositional phrase, modifying a noun in a noun phrase) I saw [the man whom we met yesterday].

  6. Sotho parts of speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sotho_parts_of_speech

    These merely stand in place of nouns and say nothing else about them. They are formed from the pronominal concord of the noun (Doke & Mofokeng claims that the pronominal concord is actually derived from the absolute pronoun) plus the suffix -na. Note that any affixes attached to the pronoun do not change its form. [4] The tone pattern is [_ ¯ ].

  7. Construct state - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Construct_state

    In the older Semitic languages, the use of the construct state is the standard (often only) way to form a genitive construction with a semantically definite modified noun. The modified noun is placed in the construct state, which lacks any definite article (despite being semantically definite), and is often phonetically shortened (as in ...

  8. Noun adjunct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noun_adjunct

    The adjectival noun term was formerly synonymous with noun adjunct but now usually means nominalized adjective (i.e., an adjective used as a noun) as a term that contrasts the noun adjunct process, e.g. the Irish meaning "Irish people" or the poor meaning "poor people". [citation needed] Japanese adjectival nouns are a different concept.

  9. Genitive case - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genitive_case

    Placing a modifying noun in the genitive case is one way of indicating that it is related to a head noun, in a genitive construction. However, there are other ways to indicate a genitive construction. For example, many Afroasiatic languages place the head noun (rather than the modifying noun) in the construct state.