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deverbal noun การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The final class IV consists of mostly abstract and deverbal nouns.
  • For more information see verbal noun, deverbal noun and deverbal adjective.
  • Deverbal nouns can potentially be long and complex, such as
  • Many also use the root of the deverbal noun ('voice').
  • The formation of deverbal nouns is one of the types of nominalization ( noun formation ).
  • English has analogous types of verbal nouns ( truly verbal kinds  gerunds and infinitives  and deverbal nouns ).
  • The most common type of noun is the deverbal noun ( i . e ., a noun derived from a verb ).
  • Deverbal nouns are verbs ( or verb phrases ) that have been zero derivation ( that is, verbs that are used syntactically as nouns without an added nominalizer ).
  • The " basic " stem is used for the preterit active verb form while the " stative " stem is used for the resultative stative verb-forms and deverbal nouns.
  • Where the deverbal noun is derived by means of the agentive suffix the verb is almost invariably in the third person singular form, which is to say, not marked for number.
  • The "-ing " form of any verb can serve as a deverbal noun, although the same word form can also be used verbally as a gerund or participle.
  • When used as a pure noun or adjective ( i . e . having lost its grammatical verbal character ), the "-ing " form may be called a deverbal noun or deverbal adjective.
  • However, according to Steeman ( 2011 ), all body parts are masculine, bigger plants are masculine while smaller plants are feminine, machinery nouns new to the Sandawe ( whose names are typically borrowed from Swahili ) are usually feminine, and deverbal nouns representing acts ( nominalizations ) are masculine.
  • Some "-ing " forms, particularly those such as " boring ", " exciting ", " interesting ", can also serve as deverbal adjectives ( distinguished from the present participle in much the same way as the deverbal noun is distinguished from the gerund ).