1,015 results on '"Inflection"'
Search Results
2. The Syntax of the Genitive Case in Longus’ Novel Daphnis and Chloe
- Author
-
Inesa Chakal
- Subjects
genitive ,inflection ,ancient greek ,syntactic functions ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
This study aims to explore the syntactic functions and characteristics of the genitive case in the ancient Greek novel “Daphnis and Chloe” by Longus, a text from the 2nd century AD, which exemplifies the “second sophistic” period of rhetorical development. The primary source for this research is the text of “Daphnis and Chloe”, which has been thoroughly analysed to ascertain the usage of the genitive case in various syntactic roles. The research employs descriptive and structural methods of linguistic analysis. The descriptive method identifies and explains instances of the genitive case within the text, while the structural method examines the relationships between these instances and other linguistic elements. The genitive case in the novel is found to perform multiple syntactic functions, including controlling verbs, nouns, adjectives, and expressing various semantic nuances. Detailed examples are provided to illustrate these functions and their impact on the text’s meaning. The findings offer a foundation for further studies of the genitive case in ancient Greek texts, providing significant insights for researchers and linguists interested in ancient Greek grammar and its syntactic constructions. The study enhances understanding of ancient rhetorical techniques and their application in literary texts during the “second sophistic” period.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. From derivation to inflection: the case of the Turkish nominalizer (y)Iş
- Author
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Rentzsch Julian
- Subjects
complementation ,derivation ,grammaticalization ,inflection ,nominalization ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
The Turkish nominalizer -(y)Iş demonstrates a broad spectrum of functions ranging from a deverbal word-formation device that forms lexicalized nouns with concrete and abstract meanings to an inflectional marker used in nominal clauses, especially in clausal complementation. In some uses, the item conveys manner semantics. While the item itself has been variously investigated and forms an established part of any Turkish grammar description, there is still a lack of consensus on its functional and semantic properties. This article investigates the morphosyntactic functions and the semantic features of the nominalizer -(y)Iş in light of the claims in the linguistic literature on the one hand, which include manner, countable events, factive imperfective, single instance of an event, direct reference to the inner process of an action, etc., and of examples from primary sources on the other, and evaluates the findings from the perspective of grammaticalization. It will be argued that the range of functions of this item and the fact that it seems to resist any straightforward analysis result from its transition from a derivational marker to an inflectional marker with tasks including complementizer functions, a process in which manner semantics will be argued to play a role.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The role of INFL in code-switching: a study of a Papiamento heritage community in the Netherlands.
- Author
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Parafita Couto, M. Carmen, Pouw, Charlotte, Laanen, Rodi, and López, Luis
- Subjects
CODE switching (Linguistics) ,BILINGUALISM ,HERITAGE language speakers ,GENERALIZATION ,NOMINALS (Grammar) - Abstract
Introduction: In heritage bilingualism studies, code-switching has often been overlooked, with a focus on either the heritage language or the dominant societal language of the bilingual individual. However, exploring code-switching can provide valuable insights into heritage speakers' grammar, revealing patterns that may not be apparent when only examining monolingual speech. Recent research suggests that in code-switched clauses, functional elements must align with the language of verbal inflection (INFL), which encompasses tense, aspect, voice, and agreement. This generalization is usually referred to as the Matrix Language Frame (MLF). The present study explores the empirical validity of this generalization using an experimental protocol that controls for variables that earlier work did not take into consideration. These variables are (a) adjacency between INFL and the functional element, (b) the interaction of the MLF with embedded islands, and (c) the possibly degrading effects of inserting a functional category. Thus, the aim of this study is to provide evidence in support (or not) of the INFL constraint beyond the experimental limitations in earlier work. The study focuses on the bilingual combination Papiamento-Dutch. Our results, by and large, support the MLF generalization. Methods: We carried out an online audio survey (3-point Likert scale) with 43 Papiamento-Dutch bilinguals. We manipulated the position of the switch and controlled for potential directionality effects by presenting code-switches in both switching directions. Results: We find a scale of acceptability, where the conditions that respect the INFL constraint are preferred. Additionally, and consistent with recent corpus and experimental literature, our results point to a clear asymmetry regarding directionality effects or choice of ML, reflecting how code-switching is deployed in the community. Discussion: Controlling for directionality allows us to discern the mechanisms of the INFL constraint. Thus, these findings underscore the intertwining influence of linguistic factors and community norms in guiding code-switching dynamics. Such insights extend beyond the specific context to shed light on broader dynamics within (heritage-language) bilingualism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Ideal and real paradigms: language users, reference works and corpora.
- Author
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Bermel, Neil, Knittl, Luděk, Alldrick, Martin, and Nikolaev, Alexandre
- Subjects
- *
NATIVE language , *FORM perception , *CORPORA , *LANGUAGE & languages , *LINGUISTICS - Abstract
This article approaches defective and overabundant paradigm cells as an opportunity and pitfall for usage-based linguistics. Through reference to two production tasks involving native speakers of Czech, we show how definitions of these two categories are problematized when multiple forms per context are entrenched, or when pre-emption seems to occur in the absence of entrenchment: in other words, pre-emption occurs via entrenchment of uncertainty. We explain the results by adopting a broader, usage-based perspective. We examine the relationship between frequency (as proxy for exposure) and reference-work information (as proxy for a priori structure) to assess their connection with our experimental results. We assign a role to frequency as helping to form perceptions of "suitable" and "unsuitable" forms, but also note places where non-frequency factors predominate. "Structure" as represented by reference-work recommendations appears to have no significant connection to our experimental results; we discuss reasons for this. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Are some morphological units more prone to spelling variation than others? A case study using spontaneous handwritten data.
- Author
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Berg, Kristian, Hartmann, Stefan, and Claeser, Daniel
- Abstract
The relation between morphology and spelling is an important source of evidence for theories of linguistic processing. In particular, spelling errors can help us assess the role of morphological structure in language users' mental representations of words in authentic texts. Previous research suggests that some morphological units are more prone to spelling errors than others, partly depending on the degree to which they are perceived as separate units. In this paper, we want to test this hypothesis by exploring graphemic variation in a collection of 1,667 German school-exit exams. Specifically, we code the spelling errors for their morphological structure. We can show that inflectional suffixes show a much higher probability of final letter omissions compared to final stems or derivational suffixes. We also find tentative evidence that case markers are more often affected by omissions than number markers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A binary inflectional voice contrast in Mabaan (Western Nilotic).
- Author
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Andersen, Torben
- Subjects
- *
TRANSITIVITY (Grammar) , *RELATIVE clauses , *HUMAN voice , *VERBS - Abstract
In Mabaan, a Western Nilotic language, there is a binary inflectional voice contrast in the morphology of verbs. In addition to a morphologically unmarked basic voice, there is a fully productive applicative voice, which is morphologically marked. This applicative voice may be called circumstantial in order to distinguish it from another applicative voice, which is derivational, namely benefactive. The circumstantial voice turns an adjunct into an object, making an intransitive verb transitive and a transitive verb ditransitive. In a main clause, however, a transitive verb needs to be detransitivized via antipassive derivation in order for an adjunct to become object through the circumstantial voice. In some types of subordinate clauses, by contrast, any verb can get the circumstantial voice, whatever its transitivity, derivational status and meaning. This voice is obligatory in relative clauses when the relativized constituent is an adjunct and in some types of adverbial clauses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Null Subjects in the Romance Languages
- Author
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Costa, João
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Nominal Inflectional Morphology in Germanic: Nouns
- Author
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Zimmer, Christian
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Root suppletion in Swedish as contextual allomorphy.
- Author
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Adamson, Luke James
- Abstract
The present article provides a case study of the forms corresponding to the meaning 'small' in Swedish, which exhibit a number-based suppletive alternation: descriptively, liten appears in the singular while små appears in the plural. We demonstrate that this alternation is best treated as contextual allomorphy, and provide six arguments that favor this account over a plausible alternative, according to which the forms realize two distinct roots with different lexical semantics. We situate a Distributed Morphology-based account of the alternation within the broader context of inflection in the language, and address challenges and complications to the allomorphy approach from outside of the root's 'typical' adjectival contexts, including adverbs and compounding. This study supports the existence of root suppletion conditioned by inflectional features, and has implications for our understanding of locality conditions on root suppletion as well as contextual allomorphy more broadly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Time reference in aphasia: are there differences between tenses and aphasia fluency type? A systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis.
- Author
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Cordonier, Natacha, Schaffner, Evodie, Zeroual, Lana, and Fossard, Marion
- Subjects
APHASIA ,AGRAMMATISM - Abstract
Time reference is used to build the temporal framework of discourse and is essential in ensuring efficient communication. Several studies have reported time reference deficits in fluent and non-fluent aphasia and have shown that tenses (past, present, future) are not all impaired to the same extent. However, there is little consensus on the dissociations between tenses, and the question of the influence of the type of aphasia (fluent vs. non-fluent) on time reference remains open. Therefore, a systematic review and an individual participant data meta-analysis (or mega-analysis) were conducted to determine (1) whether one tense is more impaired than another in fluent and non-fluent aphasia and, if so, (2) which task and speaker-related factors moderate tense effects. The systematic review resulted in 35 studies reporting the performance in time reference of 392 participants. The mega-analysis was then performed on 23 studies for a total of 232 participants and showed an alteration of past tense compared to present and future tenses in both types of aphasia. The analysis also showed a task and an age effect on time reference but no gender effect, independently of tenses. These results add to our knowledge of time reference in aphasia and have implications for future therapies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Weight bounds for (3,γ)-hyperelliptic curves.
- Author
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Barbosa da Silva, Rafael and Cotterill, Ethan
- Abstract
(N , γ) -hyperelliptic semigroups were introduced by Fernando Torres to encapsulate the most salient properties of Weierstrass semigroups associated with totally ramified points of N-fold covers of curves of genus γ . Torres characterized (2 , γ) -hyperelliptic semigroups of maximal weight whenever their genus is large relative to γ . Here we do the same for (3 , γ) -hyperelliptic semigroups, and we formulate a conjecture about the general case whenever N ≥ 3 is prime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Trajectories of change in paradigmatic cells in Czech.
- Author
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BERMEL, Neil and KNITTL, Luděk
- Abstract
Copyright of Naše Řeč is the property of Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Institute of the Czech Language and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Uncertainty in the production of Czech noun and verb forms.
- Author
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Bermel, Neil, Knittl, Luděk, and Nikolaev, Alexandre
- Subjects
NOUNS ,NATIVE language ,VERBS ,MATERIALS handling ,CELL aggregation ,DECEPTION ,RISK-taking behavior - Abstract
We examine the reactions of Czech native speakers to cues asking them to supply inflectional forms of nouns and verbs that are either canonical (non-variant), overabundant, or supposedly defective, to see what distinguishing characteristics these three conditions have for production. We find that respondents handle defective material differently from other conditions, producing different sorts of forms at different frequencies, and taking significantly longer to do so. Overabundant cells pattern at the individual level like canonical inflectional cells, but collectively display a significantly more varied and less focused spread of forms produced than our canonical cells. The individual dimension of uncertainty in production is thus limited to defective cells, but the collective dimension of uncertainty is evident between all three conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Time reference in aphasia: are there differences between tenses and aphasia fluency type? A systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis
- Author
-
Natacha Cordonier, Evodie Schaffner, Lana Zeroual, and Marion Fossard
- Subjects
aphasia ,agrammatism ,inflection ,tense ,time reference ,verbs ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Time reference is used to build the temporal framework of discourse and is essential in ensuring efficient communication. Several studies have reported time reference deficits in fluent and non-fluent aphasia and have shown that tenses (past, present, future) are not all impaired to the same extent. However, there is little consensus on the dissociations between tenses, and the question of the influence of the type of aphasia (fluent vs. non-fluent) on time reference remains open. Therefore, a systematic review and an individual participant data meta-analysis (or mega-analysis) were conducted to determine (1) whether one tense is more impaired than another in fluent and non-fluent aphasia and, if so, (2) which task and speaker-related factors moderate tense effects. The systematic review resulted in 35 studies reporting the performance in time reference of 392 participants. The mega-analysis was then performed on 23 studies for a total of 232 participants and showed an alteration of past tense compared to present and future tenses in both types of aphasia. The analysis also showed a task and an age effect on time reference but no gender effect, independently of tenses. These results add to our knowledge of time reference in aphasia and have implications for future therapies.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The role of INFL in code-switching: a study of a Papiamento heritage community in the Netherlands
- Author
-
M. Carmen Parafita Couto, Charlotte Pouw, Rodi Laanen, and Luis López
- Subjects
code-switching ,nominal constructions ,inflection ,heritage bilingualism ,Papiamento/Papiamentu ,Dutch ,Language and Literature - Abstract
IntroductionIn heritage bilingualism studies, code-switching has often been overlooked, with a focus on either the heritage language or the dominant societal language of the bilingual individual. However, exploring code-switching can provide valuable insights into heritage speakers' grammar, revealing patterns that may not be apparent when only examining monolingual speech. Recent research suggests that in code-switched clauses, functional elements must align with the language of verbal inflection (INFL), which encompasses tense, aspect, voice, and agreement. This generalization is usually referred to as the Matrix Language Frame (MLF). The present study explores the empirical validity of this generalization using an experimental protocol that controls for variables that earlier work did not take into consideration. These variables are (a) adjacency between INFL and the functional element, (b) the interaction of the MLF with embedded islands, and (c) the possibly degrading effects of inserting a functional category. Thus, the aim of this study is to provide evidence in support (or not) of the INFL constraint beyond the experimental limitations in earlier work. The study focuses on the bilingual combination Papiamento–Dutch. Our results, by and large, support the MLF generalization.MethodsWe carried out an online audio survey (3-point Likert scale) with 43 Papiamento–Dutch bilinguals. We manipulated the position of the switch and controlled for potential directionality effects by presenting code-switches in both switching directions.ResultsWe find a scale of acceptability, where the conditions that respect the INFL constraint are preferred. Additionally, and consistent with recent corpus and experimental literature, our results point to a clear asymmetry regarding directionality effects or choice of ML, reflecting how code-switching is deployed in the community.DiscussionControlling for directionality allows us to discern the mechanisms of the INFL constraint. Thus, these findings underscore the intertwining influence of linguistic factors and community norms in guiding code-switching dynamics. Such insights extend beyond the specific context to shed light on broader dynamics within (heritage-language) bilingualism.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Acquisition of Inflection in Romance Languages
- Author
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Parisse, Christophe
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Early verb production in Nungon.
- Author
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Sarvasy, Hannah S.
- Subjects
VERBS ,SPEECH ,CHILDREN'S language ,INFLECTION (Grammar) ,CORPORA - Abstract
This brief research report presents a comparison of the early verb productions of four children acquiring the Papuan language Nungon as a first language. A previous case study examined only verb productions of the child TO; these are now compared with those from three other children, studied from ages 1;1-2;7 (non-dense corpus; one child, AB) and ages 2;4-2;7 (dense corpora; two children, MK and MF). Two of the most striking features of TO's early verb productions are shown to be outliers relative to the other three children: her 'root nominals' stage and her delayed near future tense production. Neither of these is transparently linked to patterns in her parents' child-directed speech. The other children also display differing strategies into language production. The dense corpus is beneficial for catching tokens of less-frequent inflections, but the frequent long recording sessions may be difficult for at least one child to tolerate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Sound patterns, frequency and predictability in inflection.
- Author
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CSER, ANDRÁS
- Abstract
The paper investigates the relations between phonological form and information content within Latin verbal inflection from two interrelated points of view. It looks at conditional entropy relations within the present paradigm to see how these relate to the textual frequency of the individual forms; and it seeks to answer the question to what extent the phonological form of stems and endings has the potential to lead to ambiguity in morphological marking. The latter issue is approached from the angle of the information content that word forms taken in themselves have about their morphological status. The broader question of potential ambiguity is broken down into two separate questions: one concerns stems where intra-paradigmatic ambiguity would be possible; the other concerns stems that include phonological material that could itself be interpreted as a morphological marker. The absence of potential ambiguity in the first sense, and its severe restriction in the second sense is interpreted here as an emergent mechanism to enhance the information content of verb forms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Rules and exceptions: A Tolerance Principle account of the possessive suffix in Northern East Cree.
- Author
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HENKE, Ryan E.
- Abstract
Debate around inflectional morphology in language acquisition has contrasted various rule- versus analogy-based approaches. This paper tests the rule-based Tolerance Principle (TP) against a new type of pattern in the acquisition of the possessive suffix - im in Northern East Cree. When possessed, each noun type either requires or disallows the suffix, which has a complex distribution throughout the lexicon. Using naturalistic video data from one adult and two children – Ani (2;01–4;03) and Daisy (3;08–5;10) – this paper presents two studies. Study 1 applies the TP to the input to extrapolate two possible sets of nested rules for - im and make predictions for child speech. Study 2 tests these predictions and finds that each child's production of possessives over time is largely consistent with the predictions of the TP. This paper finds the TP can account for the acquisition of the possessive suffix and discusses implications for language science and Cree language communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Arithmetic inflection formulae for linear series on hyperelliptic curves.
- Author
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Cotterill, Ethan, Darago, Ignacio, and Han, Changho
- Subjects
- *
MODULES (Algebra) , *INFLECTION (Grammar) , *ARITHMETIC , *ALGEBRAIC curves , *COMPLEX numbers , *HOMOTOPY theory - Abstract
Over the complex numbers, Plücker's formula computes the number of inflection points of a linear series of fixed degree and projective dimension on an algebraic curve of fixed genus. Here, we explore the geometric meaning of a natural analog of Plücker's formula and its constituent local indices in A1$\mathbb {A}^1$‐homotopy theory for certain linear series on hyperelliptic curves defined over an arbitrary field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Nominal Inflectional Morphology in Germanic: Adjectives
- Author
-
Enger, Hans-Olav
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Early verb production in Nungon
- Author
-
Hannah S. Sarvasy
- Subjects
child language acquisition ,Papuan ,Nungon ,verb ,production ,inflection ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
This brief research report presents a comparison of the early verb productions of four children acquiring the Papuan language Nungon as a first language. A previous case study examined only verb productions of the child TO; these are now compared with those from three other children, studied from ages 1;1–2;7 (non-dense corpus; one child, AB) and ages 2;4–2;7 (dense corpora; two children, MK and MF). Two of the most striking features of TO’s early verb productions are shown to be outliers relative to the other three children: her ‘root nominals’ stage and her delayed near future tense production. Neither of these is transparently linked to patterns in her parents’ child-directed speech. The other children also display differing strategies into language production. The dense corpus is beneficial for catching tokens of less-frequent inflections, but the frequent long recording sessions may be difficult for at least one child to tolerate.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Paradigmatic and Syntagmatic Effects in Estonian Spontaneous Speech.
- Author
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Lõo, Kaidi, Tomaschek, Fabian, Lippus, Pärtel, and Tucker, Benjamin V.
- Subjects
- *
SEMANTICS , *WORD recognition , *LINGUISTICS , *SPEECH evaluation , *PARADIGMS (Social sciences) , *MATHEMATICAL variables , *PHONETICS ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Recent evidence indicates that a word's paradigmatic neighbors affect production. However, these findings have mostly been obtained in careful laboratory settings using words in isolation, and thus ignoring potential effects that may arise from the syntagmatic context, which is typically present in spontaneous speech. The current corpus analysis investigates paradigmatic and syntagmatic effects in Estonian spontaneous speech. Following work on English, we focus on the duration of inflected and uninflected word-final /-s/ in content words, while simultaneously investigating whole words. Our analyses reveal three points. First, we find an effect of realized inflectional paradigm size, such that smaller paradigms actively used by the speakers lead to longer durations. Second, higher conditional probability is associated with shorter word forms and shorter segments. Finally, we do not directly replicate previous work on effects of inflectional status as in English word-final /-s/. Instead, we find that inflectional status interacts with conditional probability. We discuss the results in light of models of speech production and how they account for morphologically complex words and their paradigmatic neighbors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. A Deterministic Finite-State Morphological Analyzer for Urdu Nominal System.
- Author
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Alblwi, Abdulaziz, Mahyoob, Mohammad, Algaraady, Jeehaan, and Mustafa, Khateeb Syed
- Subjects
FINITE state machines ,URDU language ,NEW words ,NOUNS ,COMPUTATIONAL neuroscience - Abstract
The morphological analyzer is a computational process that combines lemmas with other linguistic features to produce new lexical word forms. This paper investigates the processing of a nominal system in the Urdu language. It focuses on the inflections of noun forms and studies number, gender, person, and case representations, using a Finite State Machine (FSM) to analyze and create all the possible forms of the standardized registers. The application of the analysis using this tool provides and displays all the possible structures and their declensions. This study adds all the necessary features and values to the lexical concatenating nouns according to their patterns. The accuracy score of the output is 92.7, where the actual output depends on the detailed design of the FSM and the specific morphological processes provided to the finite state tools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Why do He and She Disagree: The Role of Binary Morphological Features in Grammatical Gender Agreement in German.
- Author
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Seyboth, Margret and Domahs, Frank
- Subjects
GRAMMATICAL gender ,GERMAN language ,NATIVE language ,MENTAL representation ,NOUNS - Abstract
In many languages, grammatical gender is an inherent property of nouns and, as such, forms a basis for agreement relations between nouns and their dependent elements (e.g., adjectives, determiners). Mental gender representation is traditionally assumed to be categorial, with categorial gender nodes corresponding to the given gender specifications in a certain language (e.g., [masculine], [feminine], [neuter] in German). In alternative models, inspired by accounts put forward in theoretical linguistics, it has been argued that mental gender representations consist of sets of binary features which might be fully specified (e.g., masc [+ m, − f], fem [− m, + f], neut [− m, − f]) or underspecified (e.g., masc [+ m], fem [+ f], neut [] or masc [+ m, − f], fem [], neut [− f]). We have conducted two experiments to test these controversial accounts. Native speakers of German were asked to decide on the (un-)grammaticality of gender agreement of visually presented combinations of I) definite determiners and nouns, and II) anaphoric personal pronouns and nouns in an implicit nominative singular setting. Overall, agreement violations with neuter das / es increased processing costs compared to violations with die / sie or der / er for masculine or feminine target nouns, respectively. The observed pattern poses a challenge for models involving categorial gender representation. Rather, it is consistent with feature-based representations of grammatical gender in the mental lexicon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Meta-morphomic patterns in North Germanic.
- Author
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Enger, Hans-Olav
- Abstract
The paper presents examples of meta-morphomes (a kind of morphomic patterns, involving syncretisms) in North Germanic. There has been some debate over the notion of such patterns, and the aim is therefore to present relatively clear cases. Five cases are presented, involving inflection in verbs, nouns and adjectives. The syncretisms are all 'unnatural'; they do not make much sense for syntax, semantics or phonology. While patterns that are obvious to the linguist are not necessarily obvious to speakers, the paper presents diachronic evidence that these morphomic patterns have been noticed by speakers. At least some criticism against 'morphomic' analyses is based on implausible premises: An analysis in terms of features is not automatically preferable only by being possible; the idea of 'taking morphology seriously' is untenable; the claim that the morphomic approach is a mere enumeration of facts may involve a self-contradiction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Aspectual pairs: Prefix vs. suffix way of formation
- Author
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Valery Dmitrievich Solovyev, Vladimir Vladimirovich Bochkarev, and Venera Rustamovna Bayrasheva
- Subjects
aspectual pairs ,inflection ,word formation ,quantitative analysis ,corpora ,russian ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
In linguistic theory, there is no common point of view on the question of whether verbs in aspectual pairs are in inflectional or derivational relations. At the same time, the prefix and suffix methods of forming aspectual pairs are contrasted in this respect. The publications (e.g. Janda Lyashevskaya 2011) pointed out the need to develop new quantitative approaches to this aspect of the text corpus. We propose two new approaches that compare the quantitative characteristics of aspectual pairs of both types. One approach is based on the Google Books Ngram corpus and analyzes the dynamics of the frequency of the use of words in pairs. The aspectual pairs from the databases created by Janda and Lyashevskaya are considered. For a numerical assessment of the degree of proximity of the frequency graphs, the Pearson correlation coefficients were used. The second approach introduces a numerical characteristic of the semantic proximity of verbs in pairs using modern computer methods. Semantic proximity of verbs is calculated as a standard cosine measure between vectors representing the compatibility of the considered verbs in the corpus. Several computer models and text corpora are considered. Both proposed approaches did not reveal significant numerical differences in semantic proximity between verbs in aspectual pairs with prefix and suffix pairing. This is in good agreement with the results of an early study by Janda and Lyashevskaya (2011). Together with the results of this work, our research shows that the suffixal and affixal ways of forming aspectual pairs have an equal status in terms of their classification as inflectional or derivational.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Word Classes in Neurolinguistics
- Author
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Kemmerer, David and van Lier, Eva, book editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Conversion in Germanic
- Author
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Werner, Martina
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Afiksasi Verba Bahasa Madura Dialek Pamekasan berdasarkan Perspektif Derivasi dan Infleksi
- Author
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Holifatul Hasanah, Eti Setiawati, and Ika Nurhayani
- Subjects
affixation ,verb ,madurese ,derivation ,inflection ,Language and Literature - Abstract
This study aims to describe the affixation of Madurese verbs in the Pamekasan dialect of low speech level based on the perspective of derivation and inflexion. The data of this research is in the form of Pamekasan dialect Madurese verbs. The data sources in this study were 10 informants who were native speakers of the Pamekasan Madura dialect, which were determined using the snowball sampling technique. Data collection is done by using the interview method with elicitation techniques. The data obtained were then analyzed through three stages: the data reduction stage, the data presentation stage, and the conclusion preparation stage. The results showed three processes of verb-forming affixation in the Pamekasan dialect of Madura, including prefixation, suffixation, and confixation. Based on the data, it was found that several affixes that make up Pamekasan dialect Madurese verbs, including prefixes ma–, a–, ta–, N–, –, pa–, pa–, nga–, and ka–, suffixes –a, – aghi, and –è, and the confixes a–aghi, N–aghi, N–è, ma–aghi, –aghi, ma–ana, –è, a–an, ma–è, and ma–an. This affixation is divided into inflectional affixation, transpositional derivational affixation, and non-transpositional derivational affixation.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Position accuracy criteria for planar flexural hinges.
- Author
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Verotti, M., Serafino, S., and Fanghella, P.
- Subjects
- *
COMPLIANT mechanisms , *HINGES , *FLEXURE , *INFLECTION (Grammar) - Abstract
With the increasing implementation of compliant mechanisms in high-precision and high-accuracy applications, the need to evaluate the positioning performance of the flexure hinges becomes evident. In this paper, the determination of the accuracy of planar flexures is addressed by analyzing and comparing the available criteria presented in literature, including a new criterion based on the pole of the displacements. For uniform flexures, an analytical formulation is developed for end-moment loads, whereas complex loading conditions, resulting in an inflection point, are analyzed and numerically evaluated. The accuracy criteria are also applied for analyzing the positioning performance of the cross-axis flexural pivot. Various relations among the different criteria are determined, and their limitations, such as the non-bijective correspondence with the deformed configurations, are discussed. The criteria are applied to the design of a high-accuracy cross-axis pivot. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Flow Field Explorations in a Boundary Layer Pump Rotor for Improving 1D Design Codes.
- Author
-
Freschi, Rosa, Bakogianni, Agapi, Rajendran, David John, Palma, Eduardo Anselmi, Talluri, Lorenzo, and Roumeliotis, Ioannis
- Subjects
BOUNDARY layer (Aerodynamics) ,NAVIER-Stokes equations ,CENTRIFUGAL pumps ,ROTORS ,WATER pumps ,MOUNTAIN wave - Abstract
Boundary layer pumps, although attractive due to their compactness, robustness and multi-fluid and phase-handling capability, have been reported to have low experimental efficiencies despite optimistic predictions from analytical models. A lower-order flow-physics-based analytical model that can be used as a 1D design code for sizing and predicting pump performance is described. The rotor component is modelled by means of the Navier–Stokes equations as simplified using velocity profiles in the inter-disk gap, while the volute is modelled using kinetic-energy-based coefficients inspired by centrifugal pumps. The code can predict the rotor outlet and overall pump pressure ratio with an around 3% and 10% average error, respectively, compared to the reference experimental data for a water pump. Moreover, 3D RANS flow-field explorations of the rotor are carried out for different inter-disk gaps to provide insights concerning the improvement of the 1D design code for the better prediction of the overall pump performance. Improvements in volute loss modelling through the inclusion of realistic flow properties at the rotor outlet rather than the detailed resolution of the velocity profiles within the rotor are suggested as guidelines for improved predictions. Such improved design codes could close the gap between predictions and experimental values, thereby paving the way for the appropriate sizing of boundary layer pumps for several applications, including aircraft thermal management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Acquiring Polish noun inflection: Two children's productivity and error patterns in relation to parental input.
- Author
-
Price-Williams, David and Davies, Matt
- Subjects
POLISH language ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,NOUNS ,INFLECTION (Grammar) ,CORPORA - Abstract
Complex systems of inflectional morphology provide a useful testing ground for input-based language acquisition theories. Two analyses were performed on a high-density (12%) naturalistic sample of two Polish-English children's (2;0 and 3;11) and their parents' use of Polish noun inflection: first, each child's use of inflectional affixes and their lexical restrictedness was compared with their father's equalised sample. Second, the children's spontaneous case-marking errors were analysed in context and measured against type and token frequencies in both parents' data and the child-directed speech (CDS) corpus. Findings in both analyses accord with constructivist theory: near adult-like knowledge of Polish inflections hiding a range of use that is more lexically restricted than in their caregivers' speech; low error rates hiding much higher 'pockets of ignorance' for specific inflectional contexts; and patterns of error that correspond closely to token/type frequencies in the CDS, though with the older sibling making some errors that were not frequency-based. Potential effects of syncretism, case ambiguity and semantics are also discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Acquisition of Malayalam inflections: Complexity of morphosyntactic rules and its impact on developing grammars.
- Author
-
Krishnan, Gayathri G., Raghunathan, Arathi, and Sarma, Vaijayanthi M.
- Subjects
MALAYALAM language ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,MORPHOSYNTAX ,GRAMMAR ,MORPHEMICS - Abstract
In this article, we present an analysis of the complexity of grammatical constraints and their impact on early language acquisition of inflectional morphemes in Malayalam. We use the natural speech production data of two monolingual children acquiring Malayalam between the ages 1;9–2;10 and 2;3–3;0 and three bilingual children acquiring Malayalam-English between the ages 1;9–2;8, 2;0–3;0 and 1;10–2;11 to recover the underlying grammatical constraints that govern the correct productions as well as errors across monolingual and bilingual contexts. We find rules that reference lexico-semantic properties to be particularly challenging to young children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Rescaffolding the bundle in Afroasiatic inflection: Tamazight and Hebrew.
- Author
-
Shlonsky, Ur
- Subjects
INFLECTION (Grammar) ,SUFFIXES & prefixes (Grammar) - Abstract
Person, number and gender features in the Afroasiatic verbal system are sometimes prefixes, sometimes suffixes and sometimes both. This paper attempts to derive the Tamazight and Hebrew systems using syntactic tools and eschewing postsyntactic or morphological linearization rules. My point of departure is that syntactic heads contain a single feature and that features can be assembled into bundles and placed to the left or to the right of a stem by syntactic movement alone. In the simplest case, a feature is prefixal when it is merged above the verbal stem and the verbal stem remains below it and is c-commanded by it and it is a suffix when the verbal stem moves above it. The often-complex combination of prefixes and suffixes in the languages studied arises from the combination of multiple steps of movement which can target the stem alone or a category it pied pipes or is pied piped by. Allomorphy is expressed in terms of selectional restrictions and an alternative to impoverishment is proposed to handle neutralization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Agreement in Kadu: Inflectional merger as morphosyntactic abstraction.
- Author
-
Baerman, Matthew
- Subjects
MERGERS & acquisitions ,SUFFIXES & prefixes (Grammar) ,NUMBER systems ,NEUTERING - Abstract
Copyright of Diachronica is the property of John Benjamins Publishing Co. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. EXPLORING DIVERGENT VIEWS ON WORD STRUCTURE: CHALLENGING THE CONCEPT OF THE MORPHEME.
- Author
-
LUÍS, ANA R.
- Subjects
MORPHEMICS ,ENGLISH grammar ,LINGUISTICS ,VOCABULARY ,ENGLISH language - Abstract
Copyright of Biblos: Revista da Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Coimbra is the property of Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Enclisis, mesoclisis and inflection in Italo-Romance varieties: A minimalist analysis.
- Author
-
Savoia, Leonardo M. and Baldi, Benedetta
- Subjects
INFLECTION (Grammar) ,VERBS ,MORPHOLOGY ,ARGUMENT ,VOCABULARY - Abstract
This contribution addresses a central theme in morphological analysis, namely the relationship between clitics and inflectional elements. Important contributions on the point are due to Anderson (1992) and Marantz (1988), who, in different ways, connect clitics and affixes. We will propose a solution based on the idea that clitics are part of the inflectional arrangement of the verbal head. Specifically, we will investigate two types of data coming from some Romance varieties in which enclisis and mesoclisis phenomena interact with word formation. These phenomena affect the expression of the Internal Argument and lead us to rethink the analysis of enclisis and mesoclisis in terms of the ability of the inflected verb to realize Phasal domains. In other words, morphology is part of the syntactic computation, and morphemic elements, endowed with interpretable content, are introduced by the operation of Merge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. A Deterministic Finite-State Morphological Analyzer for Urdu Nominal System
- Author
-
Abdulaziz Alblwi, Mohammad Mahyoob, Jeehaan Algaraady, and Khateeb Syed Mustafa
- Subjects
Urdu natural language processing ,computational morphology ,morphological analyzer ,finite-state automata ,inflection ,derivation ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Technology (General) ,T1-995 ,Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 - Abstract
The morphological analyzer is a computational process that combines lemmas with other linguistic features to produce new lexical word forms. This paper investigates the processing of a nominal system in the Urdu language. It focuses on the inflections of noun forms and studies number, gender, person, and case representations, using a Finite State Machine (FSM) to analyze and create all the possible forms of the standardized registers. The application of the analysis using this tool provides and displays all the possible structures and their declensions. This study adds all the necessary features and values to the lexical concatenating nouns according to their patterns. The accuracy score of the output is 92.7, where the actual output depends on the detailed design of the FSM and the specific morphological processes provided to the finite state tools.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Interface Engineering for Steep Slope Cryogenic MOSFETs.
- Author
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Richstein, B., Han, Y., Zhao, Q., Hellmich, L., Klos, J., Scholz, S., Schreiber, L. R., and Knoch, J.
- Subjects
SILICON nitride ,ENGINEERING ,DIELECTRICS ,METAL oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors ,LOGIC circuits ,HAFNIUM oxide - Abstract
In this work, we study experimentally the impact of different gate dielectric stacks on the subthreshold behavior of cryogenic MOSFETs. While in room temperature devices, silicon nitride deteriorates the off-state of MOSFETs it turns out that at cryogenic temperatures an appropriately thin, grown silicon nitride layer in combination with a high-k gate dielectric counteracts the saturation of the inverse subthreshold slope and inflection phenomena. As a result, steep slope cryogenic MOSFETs with strongly improved subthreshold behavior are demonstrated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Microvariation in agreement inflection: Subject clitics vs inflection.
- Author
-
Pescarini, Diego
- Subjects
INFLECTION (Grammar) ,DIALECTS ,INVENTORIES - Abstract
This article examines the relationship between the presence and shape of subject clitics and verbal endings in a sample of 187 Italo-Romance dialects. It is found that in the majority of languages subject clitics outnumber distinctive inflectional endings. The absence of underspecified systems militates in favour of diachronic and synchronic explanations claiming that the presence of subject clitics is related to the richness of inflection. At the same time, however, the predominance of overspecified systems indicates that further factors are at play in shaping inventories of subject clitics. The second result is that, from a geolinguistic perspective, close dialects exhibit more similarities in the inflectional system than in clitic systems. This brings further support to the claim that inventories of subject clitics do not reflect the array of inflectional endings, whereas some further factors are probably involved in the emergence of subject clitics. Such factors might be either feature geometries/filters, as proposed in the previous literature, or third factors in Chomsky's sense, i.e. factors that are related to computational efficiency and/or processing costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Derivation predicting inflection: A quantitative study of the relation between derivational history and inflectional behavior in Latin.
- Author
-
Bonami, Olivier and Pellegrini, Matteo
- Subjects
- *
INFLECTION (Grammar) , *QUANTITATIVE research , *LEXEME , *VERBS , *FORECASTING - Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the value of derivational information in predicting the inflectional behavior of lexemes. We focus on Latin, for which large-scale data on both inflection and derivation are easily available. We train boosting tree classifiers to predict the inflection class of verbs and nouns with and without different pieces of derivational information. For verbs, we also model inflectional behavior in a word-based fashion, training the same type of classifier to predict wordforms given knowledge of other wordforms of the same lexemes. We find that derivational information is indeed helpful, and document an asymmetry between the beginning and the end of words, in that the final element in a word is highly predictive, while prefixes prove to be uninformative. The results obtained with the word-based methodology also allow for a finer-grained description of the behavior of different pairs of cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Contrastive analysis of word-formation processes of derivation and inflection in English and Serbian
- Author
-
Kukić Marko E.
- Subjects
morphology ,derivation ,inflection ,word formation ,contrasting ,equivalence ,english ,serbian ,Language and Literature - Abstract
Language as the primary means of communication has been developing for centuries. Each unit within a language, starting from sounds, words, phrases, and sentences, has been changed and harmonized with norms, reforms, and modern linguistic theories. Linguistic theories, which have been adopted and proposed, are part of the framework of language science. As the science of language dates back to ancient times, different terms were used for the mentioned field. Today, the science that delves into the research, influence, and shaping of a language is linguistics. This research aims to display the part of linguistics that deals with the study of word formation and its processes. The paper is based on a theoretical and practical presentation of the basic morphological processes of the English language, derivation and inflection. Special attention is paid to conversion and back-formation. Furthermore, the paper sheds light on the role of the morphological notions of root, stem, and base. Not only does the paper examine the morphological notions, but it also compares and contrasts the above-stated processes within English and Serbian languages relying on contrastive analysis. The main goal is to establish the degree of equivalence of word-formation processes between the two languages. The obtained results indicate that certain morphological processes of the two languages posess direct equivalents, but some do not share complete or direct equivalence.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Morphological and Syntactic Variation and Change in Catalan
- Author
-
Rigau, Gemma and Pérez Saldanya, Manuel
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Logic of Determinative Analysis of Agglutinative and Inflectional Languages (part 1)
- Author
-
Olga I. Valentinova and Mikhail A. Rybakov
- Subjects
agglutination ,bilingualism ,grammar ,inflection ,morphological classification ,multilingualism ,systemic typology ,slavic languages ,turkic languages ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
A clear understanding of the systemic differences between interacting languages is necessary to study the interaction of languages in the mind of a bilingual (multilingual) personality and improve the practice of teaching languages in a transcultural environment. If such languages belong to different morphological types, the method of determinant analysis can be proposed as an effective tool for methodological forecasting of negative interference. The goal set by the authors of the article is to establish cause-and-effect relationships between the systemic determinant of the language type and its particular specific features at the levels of phonetics, morphology and syntax. The object of the research is the agglutinative and inflectional types of languages that lie between the extreme manifestations of proximity and remoteness of individual minds. In their work, the authors rely on the systemic methodology of determinant typological analysis, developed in the 1960s-70s by the founder of modern systemic linguistics, Professor Gennady Prokopyevich Melnikov.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The dative and instrumental dual in East Baltic
- Author
-
Eugen Hill
- Subjects
East Baltic ,Gaulish ,Ancient Greek ,inflection ,dual number ,dative case ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion - Abstract
The paper deals with two case-forms of East Baltic nominals, the dative and the instrumental dual. It summarises what is already known about these case-forms from Lithuanian and Latvian dialects as well as from Old Lithuanian sources. It is demonstrated that these data imply a particular reconstruction of the dual inflectional endings in these cases for Proto-Baltic. Subsequently, the paper shows that etymological matches of the reconstructed Proto-Baltic endings of the dative and instrumental dual may be attested in two further branches of Indo-European. Such endings are found in Gaulish, which is a member of the Celtic branch, and in Ancient Greek.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Spoken and Sign Language Emergence: A Comparison.
- Author
-
McWhorter, John
- Subjects
SIGN language ,CREOLE dialects ,TENSE (Grammar) ,ASPECT (Grammar) ,OPACITY (Linguistics) - Abstract
A comparison of emerging signed languages and creole languages provides evidence that, when language is emerging, it prioritizes marking the novelty of information; is readily recursive; favors the manner of action (aspect) over the time of action (tense); develops inflection readily only in a visual, as opposed to aural, mode; and develops derivational opacity only as the result of drift over long periods of time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Conjugations of Matlatzinca.
- Author
-
Palancar, Enrique L. and Martínez, Leonardo Carranza
- Subjects
- *
TRANSITIVITY (Grammar) , *PASSIVE voice , *MIDDLE class , *VERBS , *SUFFIXES & prefixes (Grammar) - Abstract
This article proposes that verbs in Matlatzinca (Otomian; Oto-Pamean; Oto-Manguean) fall into five inflectional classes, which the authors call 'conjugations'. The article focuses on the forms that make up the paradigms of these five classes. The conjugations of Matlatzinca are based on inflectional constructs that are largely periphrastic in composition, which means that the exponents in the constructions are not prefixes but behave like prosodic words, independent from the lexical stem of the verb being inflected. However, such exponents are not verbal auxiliaries but grammatical markers. We also show that class membership of the conjugations is determined by transitivity value. Three of the classes contain only transitive verbs, while the two remaining ones contain only intransitive verbs. One of the intransitive conjugations contains middle verbs. Transitive verbs are inflected as members of this middle class to obtain passive or middle voice readings. Wherever possible, the constructions are illustrated with examples from natural speech. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Determination of ionization constant and drug-likeness prediction of synthetic isoniazid derivatives.
- Author
-
Zafar, Shaista, Akhtar, Shamim, Mushtaq, Nousheen, Ali, Syed Imran, Ahmed, Ahsaan, and Naeem, Sabahat
- Abstract
Determination of ionization constant, commonly termed pKa is of prime interest in a wide range of pharmaceutical Research fields. The pKa of a compound is critical as it influences on its physicochemical parameters in biological and environmental systems. The study of pKa is also essential not only for the formulation of drugs and optimization of a variety of novel analytical methods, establishing new pharmaceutical dosage forms yet the exploration of the mechanism of action of drugs. In this research work, we have determined pKa values of isoniazid (INH) derivatives; N'-[(4-methyl benzoyl)] pyridine-4-carbohydrazide (I) and [2-oxo-2-(4-phenyl phenyl) ethyl] (pyridine-4-yl formamido) azanium bromide (II) through UV-spectrophotometry, a method is known for the accuracy and precision of results. These two compounds (I and II) were synthetically prepared in our lab by derivatizing INH and reported by Naeem et al in the year 2014. The mean pKa values for compounds I and II were experimentally determined as 7.37 and 3.76 respectively. The study is helpful in understanding the physicochemical behavior of these compounds in a biological system. Different pharmacokinetic parameters were also predicted using online web tools which ensured significant drug-likeness for both compounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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