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Milky wrote:
What you're doing, Kooyeen, is the same as CB was doing in earlier posts on the same theme. You are subjectively stating how easy one language is over another. To me, it depends. Indeed, yes. I have stated subjective opinions
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This looks a lot like homework to me, Civic. Why don't you Google some of these terms?-- inflection, adverb, affix, compound noun .
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Consider the following passage an answer the questions that follow:
Whether we eat at his place or mine, Ryan usually prepares the meal. Tonight I'd volunteered. I cook well, but not instinctively. I need recipes. Arriving home at six, I spent
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Hi,
Welcome to the forum.
I am a student and was given an assingment that I am finding difficult to accomplish. My instructer told me to post my question and see if any of you could help me. I need two examples of a piece of language (e.g.,
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I don't think I understand the question. Nouns, adjectives, and
adverbs are called parts of speech. Is that the terminology
you're looking for? The study of how words are put together using
meaningful prefixes and suffixes like -ness, -able,
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I think that this specialism is rare, that you don't use properly and that it shouldn't be used here:
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spe·cial·ism
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): -s
1 : specialization in or confinement of interest to a particular
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I am not infatuated with the software that runs this site. Often I
cannot post a message. I wrote a lengthy response to this, and then
suddently everything disappeared. I think that this second writup will
be shorter.
Forbes wrote:
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Imagine a language in which:
“The man hit the table with a stick” is
“Copoloteko tipadela tisadure asutariki bu.”
In this sentence
co = a classifier indicating that we are talking about something animate
polo = man
te = a
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
by
forbes
3 yr 195 days ago
Nouns, Intonations, Vowels, Difference Between, Articles, Numbers, Nominative, Accusative, Morphology, Consonants, Curriculum Vitae
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MrPedantic wrote:
What are we to make of the fact that adult native speakers often "self-prescriptivise"?
Example:
"Oh, hello, MrP. MissQ was just telling Randy and me – Randy and I – about L1 acquisition."
MrP
I read your
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
by
randy_tam
3 yr 347 days ago
Nouns, Verbs, Tenses, Regards, Clauses, Dialects, Nominative, Pronouns, Inflections, Accusative, Morphology, Inflectional Morphology, Translation
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Soulwhisper wrote:
first of all....hi am a new member here
from saudi arabia...and am taking morphology...and i have few
questions need answers . first what can we consider the
word..writings..in the sentence HIS WRITINGS WAS PUBLISHED IN
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