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quotative การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Quotative ( relative ) follows the same agglutinative pattern.
  • A similar sound is used for the quotative ending, " somebody said . . . ".
  • A few languages distinguish between " hearsay " evidentials and " quotative " evidentials.
  • The following sentences show the use of the first person and non-first person quotative particles respectively.
  • It can be used as a noun, verb, adverb, adjective, preposition, filler, and quotative.
  • These include the gerund, which has the same function as in Dravidian, and the quotative marker " iti ".
  • A quotative indicates the information is accurate and not open to interpretation ( i . e ., is a direct quotation ).
  • Enclitics often express modal concepts in Tonkawa, which occur in the declarative, interrogative, and quotative / narrative clauses or statements.
  • Makah marks for the indicative, purposive, quotative, subordinate, inferential, mirative, conditional, relative, content interrogative and polar interrogative moods.
  • Only and the diphthongs occur word-initially, apart from the quotative particle, which is variably / a ~ e ~ o ~ ?/ . occur syllable-initially within a word.
  • Vedic language also attests the use of " iti " as a quotative clause complementizer . " However, such features are also found in the indigenous Burushaski language of the Pamirs and cannot be attributed only to Dravidian influence on the early Rigveda.
  • A stylistic idiosyncrasy of at least some books in this series was that the author, " Victor Appleton, " went to great trouble to avoid repetition of the unadorned word " said "; elegant variation used a different quotative verb, or modifying adverbial words or phrases.
  • The speaker reports an event on the basis of someone else's report ( quotative, i . e . hearsay evidence ), of a dream ( revelative evidence ), of a guess ( presumptive evidence ) or of his own previous experience ( memory evidence ) ."
  • In Japanese grammar, sound symbolic words primarily function as adverbs, though they can also function as verbs ( verbal adverbs ) with the auxiliary verb Y0? ( " suru ", " do " ), often in the quotative complementizer h0 ( " to " ).
  • Clause linkage is characterised by a large variety of strategies and forms, in which the subordinator " we ", the quotative marker " se ", and the two modal complementisers " fT " and " mek " stand out as multifunctional elements with overlapping functions.
  • Here's a link to a bibliography that Arnold Zwicky ( a Stanford linguist ) put together on quotatives, which is what these things are called . http : / / www-csli . stanford . edu / ~ zwicky / quotative . bibl . pdfmnewmanqc 14 : 34, 16 February 2007 ( UTC)
  • The verb, in addition to the verbal units of quotative, aorist, repetitive, and imperfective, also contain morphemes that indicate the agent is singular, the patient is collective, the direction of the action is to the top, and all the lexical information about the whole patient noun phrase,'big quantity of meat '.
  • The putative jussive mood ( a reported order ) is formed introducing a quotative subordinate clause with the conjunction " lai " . " ViFa teica, "'lai "'ms las "'ot " "'- " he supposedly said ( ordered ) us to read . " However, jussive is not usually recognized as a distinct mood in Latvian literature.
  • It is formed by adding the ending "-ot " ( ) to the first person stem either in present or future, in fact, addition of the ending "-ot " to the first person present stem follows the same pattern that gerund is formed in Latvian and the only irregular form-that of the verb " bkt " ( " to be " )-" esot " corresponds to both the gerund ( " being " ) and the quotative ( " supposedly is " ) sense of the word ( except, quotative unlike gerund can be derived from future stems as well . ) In the case of compound tenses ( which are not shown in the above table ) the auxiliary verbs will take the "-ot " ending, e . g ., " es lasot, es esot las + jis, es las + aot, es bkaot ( iz ) las + jis "-" I'm supposedly reading, I have supposedly been reading, I will supposedly read, I will supposedly have read ."
  • It is formed by adding the ending "-ot " ( ) to the first person stem either in present or future, in fact, addition of the ending "-ot " to the first person present stem follows the same pattern that gerund is formed in Latvian and the only irregular form-that of the verb " bkt " ( " to be " )-" esot " corresponds to both the gerund ( " being " ) and the quotative ( " supposedly is " ) sense of the word ( except, quotative unlike gerund can be derived from future stems as well . ) In the case of compound tenses ( which are not shown in the above table ) the auxiliary verbs will take the "-ot " ending, e . g ., " es lasot, es esot las + jis, es las + aot, es bkaot ( iz ) las + jis "-" I'm supposedly reading, I have supposedly been reading, I will supposedly read, I will supposedly have read ."