Found inside – Page 160meaning, then both Examples (1) and (2) are not different in meaning. ... Emphasis is not achieved by simply converting a verbal sentence to a nominal one.
Found inside – Page 57To identify example ( 4 ) as correct Arabic , one needs to marshal an argument to account for the change from a nominal sentence to a verbal one .
Found inside – Page 2Subject + Verb Sentence 4: This car is very expensive. ... Subject + Verb In view of the above examples, it is clear that a sentence without a subject and a ...
Found inside – Page 194both the " x " element and the finite verb are complete sentences . ... An example of this is the tense shift " wayyiqtol → wʻx - qatal ” ( § 3 above ) .
Found insideFor example, in the sentence “Jacob loved Rachel,” Jacob is the subject ... In Hebrew, normal word order for a verbal sentence is verb-subject-object.
Found inside – Page 19[in the spring the birds sing] but it can also follow the verb: 18) amañ ec'h ... the Cornish verbal sentence is a fairly typical example of the unmarked ...
Found inside – Page 280No basic verbal sentences have been found which contain more than three noun phrases . ... Examples are : Mie rais . exists rice Rice exists .
Found inside – Page 79The verbal sentence always contains a verb , and its constituents are either verbsubject - object or subject - verb - object . Examples of this structure ...
Found inside – Page 76Here's an example of an equational sentence and a verbal sentence with subjects in the nominative case: . خبطملا يف خابطلا (aT-Tabbaakhu fii-l-maTbakhi.