attributively การใช้
- They also usually can only be used attributively, not predicatively.
- All adjectives can be used either attributively, predicatively, or substantively.
- Fun, like many nouns used attributively, moved gradually into its new role.
- Pronouns, nouns and verbs, especially state verbs, can be used attributively.
- This form is used when the adjective is used attributively, where it precedes the noun.
- Its literal meaning is sustainer, a name metaphorically and attributively used for Khuda or God.
- Adjectives agree with their nouns in number and gender but agree in state only if used attributively.
- In English, some " plurale tantum " nouns have a singular form, used only attributively.
- When there is no attributive form, this doesn't mean it can't be used attributively.
- :: It seems to me that the noun " master " is being used attributively rather than possessively.
- And the noun can be used attributively : " Lorraine cross " . talk ) 00 : 08, 26 September 2009 ( UTC)
- This is true whether they are used attributively ('the long road') or predicatively ('the road is long').
- I always thought the passive participle ( ie . past participle passive ) had adjectival force in many circumstances, and could be used attributively and predicatively.
- The first element in each combination is a noun used " attributively " _ in front of another noun, modifying it as an adjective would.
- Verbal nouns can be used as verbs by appending ( e . g . ), while an adjectival noun uses instead of ( usual for nouns ) when acting attributively.
- There is a cross-linguistic tendency for words used attributively to lose grammatical marking ( apart from those showing agreement with the head word, in languages with agreement ).
- The noun can be used attributively to do the work of an adjective : Robert Southey in 1812 denounced " the venom and the virulence of the demagogue journalists ."
- As regards hyphenation, English is more likely to hyphenate compounds used attributively ( " a spick-and-span kitchen " ) than predicatively ( " the kitchen was spick and span " ).
- "' World "'can also be used attributively, to mean'global','relating to the whole world', forming usages such as world community or world canonical texts.
- For example, the noun " knee " can be said to be used substantively in " my knee hurts ", but attributively in " the patient needed knee replacement ".
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