An Advanced English Grammar for Students and TeachersSt. Martin's Press, 1971 - 627 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 82
Seite 183
... construction is the more obvious as it appears syntactically equivalent to the be - a - doing - of - it phrase , the ... construction the house is building where the ing - form has passive meaning . Mossé considers the ing - form in this ...
... construction is the more obvious as it appears syntactically equivalent to the be - a - doing - of - it phrase , the ... construction the house is building where the ing - form has passive meaning . Mossé considers the ing - form in this ...
Seite 215
... construction modifies the principal clause as a whole , standing in the same relation to it as a subordinate clause of time , reason , condition , etc. ( see survey below ) . The construction originated in the Latin double ablative , in ...
... construction modifies the principal clause as a whole , standing in the same relation to it as a subordinate clause of time , reason , condition , etc. ( see survey below ) . The construction originated in the Latin double ablative , in ...
Seite 218
... construction ( p . 215 ) does not apply to the two last mentioned types of it . Here the construction , although having a subject of its own , does not make up complete clause , but forms part of the main clause , is its subject or its ...
... construction ( p . 215 ) does not apply to the two last mentioned types of it . Here the construction , although having a subject of its own , does not make up complete clause , but forms part of the main clause , is its subject or its ...
Inhalt
THE ARTICLES Chapter I 1 33 | 1 |
NOUNS Chapter II 3475 | 76 |
THE VERB Chapters IV XI 103373 | 85 |
Urheberrecht | |
10 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action added adjective adverbs auxiliary called century clause closely colloquial common comparative complete compound condition conjunctions construction continuous definite denoting developed difference direct distinction earlier early element especially examples express fact felt force frequently function future genitive gerund give hand helped idea illustrated imperative implied indefinite indicative infinitive inflectional introduced kind language latter less live look marked meaning mentioned modal mood names natural never normally Note noun object occurs original participle past perfect person phrase plural position possible predicate prepositional present English preterite principal pronoun question quoted reason reference relation relative result sense sentence serve Shakespeare similar simple singular sometimes speak speech statement stress strong subjunctive tense thing thou thought tion usually verb verbal weak wish writing