illative การใช้
- Newman recognised that there are dangers associated with using the Illative Sense.
- The paradigm usually consists of the inessive, elative and illative cases.
- Haskell Curry studied of illative ( deductive ) combinatory logic in 1941.
- Singular illative has a short form in some words.
- Finnish illative case, or even an approximant, as the English'r '.
- The Illative sense is for Newman, the intellectual counterpart of Aristotle's Phronesis.
- For instance, the illative of " S鰎n鋓nen " is " S鰎n鋓siin " instead of singular " S鰎n鋓seen ".
- These forms are irregular as well as suppletive : the illative and locative forms derive from completely different roots.
- The second part of the " Grammar " is where Newman introduces the concept of the Illative Sense.
- Plural illative, inessive, elative, allative, adessive, ablative, translative have a short form in some words.
- The strong grade appears in the nominative, illative and essive singular, while the weak grade appears in the remaining forms.
- As in the singular, possessive suffixes follow the instrumental, inessive, illative, elative, egressive, terminative and prolative cases.
- Similar changes affected the illative ending, which was "-hVn " where V was the same as the vowel preceding the ending.
- The " K " does not appear in the inessive, illative, terminative and prolative cases where the case ends with a vowel.
- Thus, to close that gap between converging probabilities and full assent, one needs the aid of the Illative Sense to attain certitude in specific situations.
- The illative case in Lithuanian has its own endings, which are different for each declension paradigm, although quite regular, compared with some other Lithuanian cases.
- The possessive suffix follows the instrumental, inessive, illative, elative egressive, terminative and prolative cases and the vowel reduces to " K " in the singular persons.
- When adding a possessive suffix, the inessive and illative forms change to "-0-" and the elative form changes to "-KALB-".
- The plural illative marker is "-d ", which is preceded by the plural marker "-i ", making it look the same as the plural accusative.
- An ending of the illative always ends with " n " in the singular, and " sna " is the final part of an ending of the illative in the plural.
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