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Although I'm a native English speaker, I've often struggled to understand English grammar, especially its morphosyntatical elements. I've done some reading on nominative-accusative as well as ergative-absolutive cases and I just don't get it.
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Another kind of illegitimate argument is based on analogy between one area of grammar and another. consider yet another construction where there is variation between nominative and accusative forms of pronouns:
a. They invited me to lunch. b.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
teo
4 yr 120 days ago
Grammar, Verbs, Constructions, Nouns, Pronouns, Universities, Nominative, English Grammar, Direct Objects, Accusative, Analogies
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http://pinker.wjh.harvard.edu/articles/media/1994_01_24_thenewrepublic.html
Probably no "grammatical error" has received as much scorn as "misuse" of pronoun case inside conjunctions (phrases with two parts joined by or ). What teenager has
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
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rhetor
5 yr 1 days ago
Nouns, Constructions, Predicates, Grammar, Clauses, Articles, Numbers, Plurals, Direct Objects, Nominative, Pronouns, Genders, Paragraphs, English Grammar, Possessives
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People sometimes refer to the CGEL on this site. Conveniently, some sample chapters from this publication are now online at CGEL sample chapters The preliminary chapter includes the odd lapse of logic. This is one of the first. Apologies for the
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
by
mrpedantic
5 yr 36 days ago
Nouns, Constructions, Verbs, Grammar, Direct Objects, Nominative, Pronouns, Contractions, Accusative, Analogies, English Grammar, Sample
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