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user:zeman:interset:features [2014/10/31 21:47] zeman |
user:zeman:interset:features [2014/11/18 16:01] zeman |
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| int | Interrogative pronoun / determiner / adverb (" | | int | Interrogative pronoun / determiner / adverb (" | ||
| rel | Relative pronoun / determiner / adverb. Many interrogative pronouns in many languages can also be used as relative pronouns. However, in some languages there are pronouns that fall in one of the categories but not both (Czech " | | rel | Relative pronoun / determiner / adverb. Many interrogative pronouns in many languages can also be used as relative pronouns. However, in some languages there are pronouns that fall in one of the categories but not both (Czech " | ||
+ | | exc | Exclamative pronoun / determiner, expresses the speaker' | ||
| dem | Demonstrative pronoun / determiner / adverb (" | | dem | Demonstrative pronoun / determiner / adverb (" | ||
| neg | Negative pronoun / determiner / adverb (" | | neg | Negative pronoun / determiner / adverb (" | ||
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| inf | informal (Czech " | | inf | informal (Czech " | ||
| pol | polite (Czech " | | pol | polite (Czech " | ||
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+ | ===== (abs|erg|dat)(person|number|politeness|gender) ===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | In quite a few languages, finite verb forms agree in person and number with the subject. In Basque, a subset of verbs agree with up to three arguments: one in the absolutive case, one in ergative and one in dative. To distinguish the different values of person, number (and politeness and rarely even gender), there are special features for each of the three arguments. Their names contain the three-letter code of the case of the argument: '' | ||
===== subcat ===== | ===== subcat ===== |