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  Encyclopedia of Keywords > Adverbs > Prepositions   Michael Charnine

Keywords and Sections
VERBS
COMPLEX PREPOSITIONS
BILONG
SYNTAX
SIMILAR
PLAY
MATTER
KINDS
ENDS
CHINESE
ACCUSATIVE CASE
SIMPLE PREPOSITIONS
EXCEPTIONS
DUTCH
POINT
STAND
THINGS
MEAN
MEANS
TIME
RELATIVE CLAUSES
SPACE
FAMILIES
RELATIONSHIPS
GERMAN
LIST
SENTENCES
CONTRAST
ARTICLE
USAGE
GERUND
SUBJECT
ADPOSITION
ADPOSITIONS
ABLATIVE CASE
OBJECTIVE CASE
GRAMMATICAL CASE
CONJUNCTION
MODIFIERS
PRONOUN
GENITIVE CASE
GRAMMATICAL WORDS
REASONING PROCEDURES
NOMINATIVE CASE
AUXILIARY VERBS
CERTAIN PREPOSITIONS
Review of Short Phrases and Links

    This Review contains major "Prepositions"- related terms, short phrases and links grouped together in the form of Encyclopedia article. Please click on Move Up to move good phrases up.

Definitions Submit/More Info Add a definition

  1. Prepositions are used to link nouns and pronouns to other words within a sentence.
  2. Prepositions are also closely related to semantic structures such as thematic roles, semantic templates or frames. (Web site) Move Up
  3. Prepositions are pronounced together with the following word (officially at least) The acute mark (in Slovak dĺžeň, i.e. (Web site) Move Up
  4. Prepositions are so called because they are generally placed before the words whose connection or relation with other words they point out. (Web site) Move Up
  5. Thus, prepositions are always followed by an object complement, while adverbs appear alone. (Web site) Move Up

Verbs Submit/More Info Add phrase and link

  1. Many Chamorro nouns, adjectives, prepositions, numerals, and verbs are of Spanish origin, as a result of a language contact for centuries.
  2. This contrasts with English, where verbs tend to emphasize manner, and leave the direction of motion to helper particles, prepositions, or adverbs. Move Up
  3. Noun phrases are defined as phrases formed by a noun or pronoun and any modifying words, phrases, and clauses including adjectives, prepositions, and verbs. (Web site) Move Up
  4. Verbs with Prepositions Many French verbs require a certain preposition in order for the meaning of the verb to be complete. (Web site) Move Up

Complex Prepositions Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Complex prepositions develop through the grammaticalization of commonly-used free combinations.

Bilong Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Some phrases are used as prepositions, such as long namel (bilong), "in the middle of".
  2. They are two basic prepositions in Tok Pisin: bilong and long. (Web site) Move Up

Syntax Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The only solution is to learn, verb by verb, the permissible prepositions and the other syntax of each verb. (Web site)

Similar Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Similar to the stranding of prepositions in wh-fronting is the marooning of prepositions within relative clause structures. (Web site)

Play Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Finally, frequency and similarity effects are shown to play a crucial part in the learning of prepositions in a second language. (Web site)

Matter Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. But in either event it is a matter of learning which prepositions can be used with which nouns.

Kinds Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Adverb phrases made with prepositions All kinds of adverb phrases can be made with prepositions. (Web site)

Ends Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The sentence now ends in a string of four words which are all stranded prepositions.
  2. Stephen Fry once concocted a sentence that supposedly ends in eight consecutive prepositions. Move Up

Chinese Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. For instance, whether prepositions exist in Chinese is sometimes considered an open question. (Web site)

Accusative Case Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Although most prepositions require the noun they determine to be in the accusative case, a few must be followed by a noun in the dative.
  2. The same spatial prepositions govern the accusative case when their complement is the target of a movement. Move Up
  3. The accusative case is also used after particular German prepositions. (Web site) Move Up

Simple Prepositions Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Simple prepositions can combine with verbs, but compound prepositions cannot. (Web site)

Exceptions Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. There are exceptions to this, and da- compounds are given a fuller treatment in the chapter on prepositions. (Web site)

Dutch Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Dutch prepositions generally do not take the ordinary neuter pronouns (het, dat, wat, etc.) as objects.

Point Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. To express notions of an object being close to a point, English uses the following prepositions: near, by, next to, between, among, opposite. (Web site)
  2. Projective static prepositions can sometimes take the complement itself as "point of view," if this provides us with certain information. (Web site) Move Up

Stand Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. This distinction helps us understand how directional and locational prepositions are related: they stand in the relationship of cause and effect. (Web site)

Things Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Aim: Teach kids prepositions of place, alongside rooms and things at home. (Web site)

Mean Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. About, and the participial prepositions concerning, respecting, regarding, mean with reference to. (Web site)
  2. The locative case tells where, hence corresponds to the English prepositions "at" and "on", and "in" when it does not mean "into". (Web site) Move Up

Means Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. There are only two proper prepositions: bilong (from "belong"), which means "of" or "for", and long (from "along"), which means everything else. (Web site)

Time Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. German uses the accusative to mark direct objects and objects of certain prepositions, or adverbs relating to time. (Web site)
  2. In the second half, which will be in a day or so for those following real time, we cover two locative case prepositions, a joke and a song. Move Up

Relative Clauses Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. However, as exemplified by Jasper during his training session, vampires use prepositions in relative clauses in positions beyond the prescriptive.
  2. There are often prepositions in relative clauses, and the relative pronoun is the object of the preposition. Move Up

Space Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In many cases, prepositions deal with concepts relating to space and time. (Web site)

Families Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Because of the abolition of the prepositions, many families were forced to completely reinvent their family names.

Relationships Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In Chinese, certain verbs known as coverbs express many of the relationships usually expressed by prepositions. (Web site)

German Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In both English and German, prepositions and particles derived from prepositions are treated as adverbs. (Web site)
  2. In German, prepositions are powerful enough to change what immediately follows it to be in subordination to the type of preposition. Move Up

List Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The following is a list of verbs and prepositions which commonly appear together. (Web site)
  2. Click HERE for a list of common prepositions that will be easy to print out. (Web site) Move Up

Sentences Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Some sentences that use some prepositions or don't use have a same meaning. (Web site)
  2. Examination: Put the correct prepositions in the spaces in the following sentences. Move Up

Contrast Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In contrast, the words along, behind, down and up are often used as prepositions, but are not usually used as prepositions in phrasal verbs. (Web site)

Article Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. However, the article la "the", demonstratives such as tiu "that" and prepositions (such as ĉe "at") must come before their related nouns. (Web site)

Usage Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Perfect Prepositions shows the meanings and usage of prepositions in Modern English. (Web site)

Gerund Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Additionally, prepositions are often followed by a gerund. (Web site)

Subject Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Prepositions may be used with either the subject or indirect object forms of the 3rd person singular and plural pronouns.

Adposition Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The technical term used to refer collectively to prepositions, postpositions, and circumpositions is adposition. (Web site)
  2. Regarding the use and misuse of prepositions see: Where an adposition is required in one language, it may not be in another. (Web site) Move Up

Adpositions Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Circumpositions Circumpositions - adpositions with part before the noun phrase and part after - are much less common than prepositions or postpositions. (Web site)
  2. Prepositions, postpositions, and circumpositions can collectively be called adpositions. Move Up

Ablative Case Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Let's just say for now that when you see a noun in the ablative case, translate it by using the prepositions "with" or "by".
  2. Some prepositions including by and with invoke the ablative case. Move Up
  3. Usually Latin expresses motion away from something with one of the prepositions ab, ex, de plus the ablative case. (Web site) Move Up

Objective Case Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Government has to do with verbs and prepositions, both of which are said to govern words by having them in the objective case. (Web site)

Grammatical Case Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Of, relating to, or being the grammatical case that is the direct object of a verb or the object of certain prepositions. (Web site)

Conjunction Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Prepositions sometimes perform this important function in sentences when they are used in conjunction with the verb to be. (Web site)
  2. This is because we almost always use prepositions in conjunction with nouns to serve the same purpose. Move Up

Modifiers Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. VSO languages put modifiers after, and use prepositions.
  2. If you find a noun [with or without modifiers] following one of these five prepositions, then all you have is a prepositional phrase. (Web site) Move Up

Pronoun Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. As the object of a preposition, a pronoun is fused with the preposition; one speaks here of "inflected" or "conjugated" prepositions.

Genitive Case Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Other prepositions require the genitive case of nouns. (Web site)
  2. The genitive case is also used for objects of some prepositions (e.g. Move Up

Grammatical Words Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Most grammatical words such as prepositions and conjunctions fall under the class of particle (Tritton viii).

Reasoning Procedures Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The semantic characterization of prepositions has also motivated the emergence of a few dedicated logical frameworks and reasoning procedures.

Nominative Case Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Other objective functions, including dative functions are achieved with prepositions, all of which normally take the nominative case. (Web site)
  2. No prepositions take nouns in the nominative case. (Web site) Move Up

Auxiliary Verbs Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Further, that of compound conjugation, whether by the prefixion of prepositions to roots or by the addition of auxiliary verbs to noun and adjective-stems. (Web site)

Certain Prepositions Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. However, in such languages the instrumental case may have other uses (such as being governed by certain prepositions).
  2. The Arabic genitive marking also appears after certain prepositions. Move Up

Categories Submit/More Info

  1. Adverbs
  2. Nouns Move Up
  3. Language > Grammar > Semantics > Verbs Move Up
  4. Languages > Language > Words > Pronouns Move Up
  5. Adjectives Move Up

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  Short phrases about "Prepositions"
  Originally created: April 04, 2011.
  Links checked: January 26, 2013.
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