• semantics. Look up expletive (linguistics) in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Dummy pronoun Expletive attributive Expletive deleted Expletive infixation Morphology...
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  • Look up expletive in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Expletive may refer to: Expletive (linguistics), a word or phrase that is not needed to express the...
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  • metrical purposes, and so forth. The use of expletive for such a meaning is now rare. Rather, expletive is a linguistics term for a meaningless word filling a...
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  • Evolution of languages - Evolutionary linguistics - Example-based machine translation - Exegesis - Expletive - Expletive attributive False cognate - False...
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  • In linguistics, the topic, or theme, of a sentence is what is being talked about, and the comment (rheme or focus) is what is being said about the topic...
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  • (most commonly), interjections, or (rarely) verbs. Within linguistics, however, "expletive" is a technical term referring to a word that does not contribute...
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  • A dummy pronoun, also known as an expletive pronoun, is a deictic pronoun that fulfills a syntactical requirement without providing a contextually explicit...
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  • In linguistics, control is a construction in which the understood subject of a given predicate is determined by some expression in context. Stereotypical...
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  • if nothing is actually being represented by it. In this case, it is an expletive and a dummy pronoun. In imperative clauses, most languages elide the subject...
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  • hypothesis seems to only be based on visual appearance. When toning down expletives, asterisks are often used to replace letters. For example, the word "badword"...
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  • In linguistics, a copula /‘kɑpjələ/ (pl.: copulas or copulae; abbreviated cop) is a word or phrase that links the subject of a sentence to a subject complement...
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  • (NPs) like yesterday—don't take theta roles. But almost all NPs (except expletives) express thematic relations. An argument can bear only one theta role...
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  • slang phenomenon. Infixes also occur in some language games. The use of 'expletive infixes' such as -fucking- and -bloody-, which are words rather than affixes...
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  • Espinal, M Teresa (2000). "Expletive negation, negative concord and feature checking". Catalan Working Papers in Linguistics. 8: 47–69. Retrieved 8 March...
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  • pronoun or empty element. The former analysis has come to be termed the "expletive" view, whereas the latter is referred to as the "extraposition" approach...
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  • Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Bloody, as an adjective or adverb, is an expletive attributive commonly used in British English, Irish English, and Australian...
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  • the work before it gets dark.) [With the auxiliary avoir and optional expletive ne] Aie écrit le livre demain. (Write the book tomorrow.) [With the auxiliary...
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  • List of linguists (category Linguistics lists)
    person who studies natural language (an academic discipline known as linguistics). Ambiguously, the word is sometimes also used to refer to a polyglot...
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  • Pronoun (section Linguistics)
    In linguistics and grammar, a pronoun (glossed PRO) is a word or a group of words that one may substitute for a noun or noun phrase. Pronouns have traditionally...
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  • In linguistics, a modifier is an optional element in phrase structure or clause structure which modifies the meaning of another element in the structure...
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  • practices. It has been suggested that whether a term can be considered an expletive may depend on whether it is intended to be applied figuratively or literally...
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  • verb takes a third person singular inflection and often appears with an expletive subject. In the active voice, impersonal verbs can be used to express...
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  • Thumbnail for Profanity
    to profanity, though blasphemy has retained its religious connotation. Expletive is another English term for the use of profanity, derived from its original...
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  • Jacob (2001). "Rapid Change Among Expletive Polarity Items". In Brinton, Laurel J. (ed.). Historical Linguistics 1999 (PDF). John Benjamins Publishing...
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  • phrases that were considered discourse markers were treated as fillers or expletives: words or phrases that had no function at all. Now they are assigned functions...
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  • List of syntactic phenomena (category Linguistics lists)
    pronouns Ellipsis Ergative verb Exceptional case-marking Existential clauses Expletives Extraposition Gapping Heavy NP shift Inverse copula sentences Movement...
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  • pronoun. The next example includes an expletive and an oblique object: This analysis identifies there as an expletive (expl), food as a nominal subject (nsubj)...
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  • In linguistics, function words (also called functors) are words that have little lexical meaning or have ambiguous meaning and express grammatical relationships...
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  • stigmatised. Although the use of expletives may offend society at large, in specific social circles or situations, the use of expletives is accepted, and expected...
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  • In linguistics, an unaccusative verb is an intransitive verb whose grammatical subject is not a semantic agent. In other words, the subject does not actively...
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