Hence, the voiced alternants induced by Verner's Law may be expected in both subjunctive pret. singular and plural. |
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It's easy enough to see how someone who doesn't know Latin could fail to realize that certain plural endings go with certain singular endings. |
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The first and second words could be either plural nouns or singular-inflected verbs. |
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Maybe some form of plural executive is needed, such as they have in Switzerland. |
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Some items in the last set might be plural nominalized obsoletes rather than verbs, but the ones I checked were third-person singular verbs. |
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A guess is that octopod is a backformation from the neuter plural octopoda, the name of the order containing octopuses. |
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It has dual number, so nouns and verbs must be learned in singular, dual, and plural. |
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The many migrations since the war have set Britain on the path to becoming a plural and diverse society. |
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And I also wonder what happens when you have a noun that doesn't need a determiner at all, for example mass nouns such as water, or plural nouns. |
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That would account for someone deciding that the plural ending was i, not realizing that this was true only of masculine nouns, not neuters. |
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I mentioned, a few paragraphs ago, the conceptual structure of a plural noun, such as houses. |
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This is a scientific term derived by making an English plural from octopod, which is the bare stem of the Greek word, not its singular. |
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As a sentence, it cannot be made plural by adding the nominative plural suffix for second declension nouns. |
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Some indefinite pronouns always take a plural verb, which means that the verb is conjugated for a plural subject. |
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This refers back to the dialectical relationship between movements in the plural and a movement in the singular. |
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A three-year-old can imitate adults and playmates, play make-believe with dolls and use pronouns or plural words. |
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Making a common noun plural usually means adding an s or changing the ending of the original word. |
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But if you read it closely, you'll see I'm using the intransitive plural subjunctive tense. |
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Some attrition in morphology, plural and past irregular morphemes, in particular, is also observed. |
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There are two present-tense verbs here, both inflected for plural agreement. |
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It's no surprise that this plural noun phrase can be conjunctively modified. |
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Educators at public schools near polygamous communities walk a fine line to encourage children from plural marriages to attend school. |
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It is permissible, where the context so allows, to construe words used in the plural as including the singular. |
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In athematic conjugation, the final long vowel of the verbal stem becomes short in the plural number. |
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Kant's use of the first person plural is a device of a very special character. |
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The confidence that nonbelievers can reason morally seems to be a precondition for a religiously plural democratic polity. |
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Hence, Lebanon is still in need of history and religion curricula capable of addressing Lebanon's plural needs. |
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I've always wondered why we use a plural pronoun to refer to a third, rather nebulous, individual. |
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Languages with dual markers have a different plural affix for sets of two than the affix for sets greater than two. |
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Simple representative democracy in such a plural polity will no longer work. |
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A religiously plural country like India throws up complex problems in a democratic set up. |
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The evolution of our society to one that is genuinely plural is moving at a snail's pace. |
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The disadvantage is that the nominative singular and the nominative plural look the same and you can only distinguish by context. |
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But the expression is either breviloquent, or the plural may have been used in view of the mission of Barnabas. |
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The Utah-based Church in the late 19th century banned the practice of taking plural wives and ex-communicates members who practice polygamy. |
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The architecture includes plural bus masters, each connected to its own bus. |
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For what it's worth, the offending sign uses an apostrophe to suggest the possessive of a singular noun instead of the plural intention. |
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There was a time a few years ago when the United States was spoken of in the plural number. |
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With respect to the plural morpheme, it is not only the case that it occurs very often in English text, but it also attaches to very many different noun stems. |
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And the plural could be knaidels, or knaidelach, or knaidlach, or knaideluch. |
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Conversely, Russian has a complex plural system in which the morphological markers for sets of two, three, and four differ from those for five through ten. |
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We will fight to the end to protect our multicultural, plural space. |
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This harmony of cultures was vital for the society's plural character. |
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Prosecutors have said that they investigated Green's marriages only after seeing him on several national television programmes talking about plural marriages. |
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The pressing need of our age is to found a public sphere that would cherish subjectivity, where plural experiences of cultures would correspond to diverse inner lives. |
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Human diversities are widely plural and their histories complex. |
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The plural of loaf is loaves, the plural of thief is thieves. |
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I assume that I have that correct, as it is many grocers who have apostrophes and therefore the apostrophe goes after the s which indicates the plural. |
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Energy cannot be counted, and the plural of the word is not in common use. |
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In 1904 church President Joseph F. Smith presented a second manifesto that disciplined those who continued to practice polygamy or perform plural marriages. |
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Its trademarks should never be used in the possessive or plural form, but should be introduced as a proper adjective followed by an appropriate descriptor. |
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The change from first person singular to plural evinces his embarrassment. |
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By contrast, Ewe, Gbandili, an Admawa-Ubangi language, and Ngwo, a Grassfields language, are languages whose logophoric pronouns have both singular and plural forms. |
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And the only women in the celestial kingdom will be those dutiful, obedient plural wives who are invited there by their husbands to serve them for all eternity. |
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The disorientation of relinquishing experience to a disaligned and plural understanding of gender is perhaps an experience of isolation rather than solidarity. |
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In a culturally plural world, subjectivity and intersubjectivity have an accommodating, juxtapositional complexity that binary distinctions misrepresent. |
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When the final a is long or accented, as it is here, the word is plural. |
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Now, vanity is a non-count noun, only very rarely used in the plural. |
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In Latin, remember that the plural of me is us, and that the plural of us is I. So a double plural is a singular, but you go from the objective to the subjective case. |
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Actually, the issue of plural vs. singular is orthogonal to the dilemma she wants to pose. |
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It is always difficult for passionate moral minorities to operate in plural cultures because they have to learn to live alongside practices which they abominate. |
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If the possessed object is plural, the clitic is e regardless of the gender. |
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The plurals of test and desk may become tesses and desses by the same rule that gives plural messes from singular mess. |
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Recently, a new logical framework, called plural logic, has also been used for characterizing the semantics of count nouns and mass nouns. |
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Note that the Turkish nouns can't take a plural suffix after the numbers and the units of measure. |
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A classic example is Member of Parliament, which in plural is Members of Parliament. |
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In general, enclisis is limited to singular kinship nouns, but it is also found with plural nouns in some central Italian dialects. |
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Because of the potentially large number of plural and possessive names, this type of pair isogram has been excluded. |
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Northern Low Franconian varieties, including standard Dutch, have also developed a common verbal plural ending. |
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Nouns can be singular or plural, and one of two genders, animate or inanimate. |
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Only the copula verb to be is still inflected for agreement with the plural and first and second person subjects. |
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Welsh has a variety of different endings and other methods to indicate the plural, and two endings to indicate the singular of some nouns. |
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Cornish has a variety of different endings to indicate the plural, and some nouns have a third collective form. |
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Pliny also, in the same sentence, makes use of the neuter plural balnea for public, and of balneum for a private bath. |
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Thus a feminine plural noun in the nominative case requires any qualifying adjectives to be feminine, plural and in the nominative case. |
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In Portuguese, traces of the neuter plural can be found in collective formations and words meant to inform a bigger size or sturdiness. |
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The definite article in English for both singular and plural nouns, is the. |
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The plural form of the name suggests it was initially composed of several villages. |
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It is now generally agreed that this one instance was a mediaeval scribal error which assumed 'mabinogion' was the plural of 'mabinogi. |
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The singular term 'Rhondda Valley' and the plural 'Rhondda Valleys' are both commonly used. |
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Fish is used as a singular noun, or as a plural to describe multiple individuals from a single species. |
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They do not mark person or number of subject, although the marking of plural subjects was still used in writing as late as the 19th century. |
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Consequently, the third person plural forms hun and hen are interchangeable in normal usage, with hun being more common. |
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A distinguishing feature between the Southern Low Franconian varieties and Low German varieties is the plural of the verbs. |
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The adjectives in Low German make a distinction between singular and plural to agree with the nouns that it modifies. |
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Like German, Low German maintains the historical Germanic distinction between the second person singular and second person plural. |
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The plural verb forms appeared decreasingly in formal writing into the 1950s, when their use was removed from all official recommendations. |
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The genders were the normal masculine, feminine and neuter, the three numbers were singular, plural and dual. |
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For example, while English man becomes men in the plural, moon is not a different form of the same word. |
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Fasti is the plural of the Latin adjective fastus, most commonly used as a substantive. |
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Class 3, which retained a clear distinction that did not rely on vowel length, was levelled in favour of the o of the plural. |
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History is perhaps more plural than traditionally imagined, leaving room for more groups to express their story. |
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Now, many speakers do not maintain this distinction and all nouns may take the plural inflection. |
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One dialect, that of the Eastern Huasteca, has a distinction between two different plural suffixes for animate and inanimate nouns. |
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Nahuatl generally distinguishes three persons, both in the singular and plural numbers. |
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Certain nouns can be used with plural verbs even though they are singular in form, as in The government were. |
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In informal English, however, the contraction there's is often used for both singular and plural. |
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For details, see English plural, English verbs, and English irregular verbs. |
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This is the source of the vowel alternation between singular and plural in German, Dutch and Low Saxon. |
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The new uniform preterite could be based on the vowel of the old preterite singular, on the old plural, or sometimes on the participle. |
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The present and past singular stem was extended to the plural, leaving the reduplication as the only change in the stem between the two tenses. |
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The past is formed either from the old past singular or from the past plural. |
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Nouns, adjectives and pronouns are declined in the four cases and for number in the singular and plural. |
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Verbs can be conjugated from the infinitive into the present tense, the past singular, the past plural and the past participle. |
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The present singular is formed from the original singular preterite stem and the present plural from the original plural preterite stem. |
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For neuters and most groups of feminines and plural masculines, the genitive case differs from the other three. |
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The instrumental case is always identical to the accusative in the singular and to the dative in the plural. |
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Some other languages use different classifying systems, especially in the plural pronouns. |
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In many languages, the verb takes a form dependent on the person of the subject and whether it is singular or plural. |
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In many languages, including English, the number categories are singular and plural. |
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However adjectives are not inflected, and most verb forms do not distinguish between singular and plural. |
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Obligatory plural marking of all nouns is found throughout western and northern Eurasia and in most parts of Africa. |
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English is typical of most world languages, in distinguishing only between singular and plural number. |
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Modern Russian has a singular vs plural number system, but the declension of noun phrases containing numeral expressions follows complex rules. |
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The plural of the noun is usually obtained by adding a suffix, according to the noun's declension. |
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Pronouns, nouns and demonstratives are used exclusively in the singular and plural forms through the use of classifiers, suffixes and prefixes. |
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Usually, the singular is the unmarked form of a word, and the plural is obtained by inflecting the singular. |
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For instance, in Arabic all nouns can have singular, plural, or dual forms. |
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Pronouns in Polynesian languages such as Tahitian exhibit the singular, dual, and plural numbers. |
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Paucal number has also been documented in some Cushitic languages of Ethiopia, including Baiso, which marks singular, paucal, plural. |
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In most languages, the singular is formally unmarked, whereas the plural is marked in some way. |
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The third logical possibility, rarely found in languages, is an unmarked plural contrasting with marked singular. |
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In such cases, an unmarked noun is neither singular nor plural, but rather ambiguous as to number. |
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In French and German, the definite articles have gender distinctions in the singular but not the plural. |
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Although many languages treat collective nouns as singular, in others they may be interpreted as plural. |
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The genitive singular definite article for masculine and neuter nouns is des, while the feminine and plural definite article is der. |
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Verbs have 6 different forms in the present tense, for three persons in singular and plural. |
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For sinine the plural partitive form is siniseid and so siniseim is the short superlative. |
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In Turkish, both the third person singular and the third person plural copulas are omittable. |
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In German the y is preserved in the plural form of some loanwords such as Babys babies and Partys parties, celebrations. |
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Following the rules of Greek grammar, that would mean the plural should be rhinocerotes but most dictionaries accept rhinoceroses. |
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Mr or Mrs Selfie could, however, copyright the innovative spelling of the word which should read Selfy in the singular and Selfies in the plural. |
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As GO is a word referring to the game, so its plural gos is. |
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But as a great mentor once told me, the plural of anecdote is not data. |
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Joyce C. Tang talks to them about shaking the stigma of plural marriage. |
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Begin with the root word, the single or plural noun to which you will add the apostrophe. |
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Yet I quit counting after 50 or so unnecessary apostrophes on plural nouns in the last issue. |
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Backus in a Dutch-Turkish corpus reports that 11 of 27 Dutch EL plural nouns are marked by a Dutch plural. |
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Feminine, neuter and plural articles do not change in the accusative. |
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Verbs in Swedish do not distinguish singular from plural number. |
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French treats zero as using the singular number, not the plural. |
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This can be seen particularly in Africa, where optionality or absence of plural marking is found particularly in the isolating languages of West Africa. |
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In the Commonwealth, these are described by the plural term law reports, the title that usually appears on the covers of the periodical parts and the individual volumes. |
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The government soon backed down, and passed male universal suffrage but reduced its impact by creating plural votes based on wealth, education and age. |
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If the plural of moose is meese the singular of sheep must be shoop. |
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The most important definite determiners in Chinese are demonstratives zhe 'this' and na 'that' and their plural forms zhexie 'these' and naxie 'those. |
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Optional plural marking is particularly common in Southeast and East Asia and Australia, and complete lack of plural marking is particularly found in New Guinea and Australia. |
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Only count nouns can be freely used in the singular and in the plural. |
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In the later Middle Ages, German, Dutch and English eliminated a great part of the old distinction between the vowels of the singular and plural preterite forms. |
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One interesting exception is the treatment of abstract and mass nouns which in Present-Day English have no plural form and are considered indivisible. |
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Other words can then be added to the original lists of singular and plural nouns to test the generalisation suggested by students and exceptions searched for. |
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The generation of the English plural dogs from dog is an inflectional rule, while compound phrases and words like dog catcher or dishwasher are examples of word formation. |
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The article used for singular nouns is different from that used for plural nouns and the article provides a distinguishing factor between the two in speech. |
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With the exception of plural forms of verbs and a slightly different syntax, particularly in the written language, the language was the same as the Swedish of today. |
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The definite form of the participle is identical to the plural form. |
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In some southwestern dialects, the weak positive is also declined in gender and number, with one form for feminine and plural, and one form for masculine and neuter. |
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Low German varieties have a common verbal plural ending, whereas Southern Low Franconian varieties have a different form for the second person plural. |
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Between chortles they point out the plural of octopus is octopi. |
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Nouns of measure and quantity remain unchanged in the plural. |
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Also, words in the singular include the plural, and as with the interchangeability of words importing gender so it is with the plural and singular. |
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However, when describing a plural noun, different articles are used. |
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For example, in femes riches, riche has to be in the feminine plural form. |
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This enabled the English translators to convey the distinction between the 1st, 2nd and 3rd person singular and plural verb forms of the original Hebrew and Greek sources. |
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The objects being counted appear in the singular, not plural form. |
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This is essential in plural, heteroglot communities, if the school is to be inclusive, and is essential in those school subjects which are contentious and contended. |
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In addition, the paradigm of the verb sannoa has also week-grade forms of the 1st and 2nd person singular and plural of the imperfect tense of the indicative mood. |
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Splinter groups who call themselves fundamentalist Mormons still practice plural marriage, including Warren Jeffs' sect on the Utah-Arizona border. |
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For instance, in American English the phrase the United Nations is treated as singular for purposes of agreement even though it is formally plural. |
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In 1852, not long after Mormons established a theocratic state in the Utah Territory, they publicly declared that plural marriage was a central Mormon belief. |
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Current members practicing plural marriage are excommunicated. |
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Which, who, and what as interrogatives can be either singular or plural. |
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A particularly rich source of options arises when the plural of an acronym would normally be indicated in a word other than the final word if spelled out in full. |
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The first is concemed with drawing attention to the currency of a usage in which less is accompanied by a plural noun, as in the title of the article. |
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The politics of the Plural Left was soft compromise politics. |
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Joseph Touma of Huntington have written an excellent resource, Atlas of Otoscopy, Plural Publishing, Inc. |
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Plural is indicated by a change of class, with a resulting change of prefix. |
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The Singular and Plural categories are fused with the article, and these endings are used when the noun phrase is not closed by any other determiner. |
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