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Перевод: participle speek participle


[существительное]
причастие [грам.]; деепричастие
[существительное]


Тезаурус:

  1. It is clear that some variables in English do function in a very general way: for example, variation between the alveolar and velar nasal in the present participle ending (ing) is universal and can be said to mark the whole English-speaking world as a single speech community.
  2. (h) (62) Under passive voice we include instances of the passive or -ed participle (anchored, abandoned, etc).
  3. According to this view, there would be an entry for a base form like sing , but not for the present participle singing , or the 3rd person singular present sings .
  4. Other verbs which could involve agency are deprived of their active meaning by being used in the passive participle form: abandoned, anchored (55); whereas stative verbs are quite frequent: resembling, looked, lie, shone, marked, etc (22).
  5. In stylistic terms, the long and digressive sentences, the accumulation of parentheses, the sustained use of the present participle, the increasing lack of conventional paragraphing and punctuation are all deployed in order to convey simultaneity of perception, in a manner reminiscent of both Proust and Faulkner.
  6. Indeed, it is perhaps not overly optimistic to think that the view of the relation between an event and its support put forward here may be applicable, mutatis mutandis, to the -ing form and may even throw light on the vexed question of gerund vs participle.
  7. The term is significant: the passive past participle (missus literally means the sent man) implies a stress on the sender, and it is quite unspecific, again implying an agenda at the sender's discretion.
  8. compound participle
  9. Where is the participle, seemingly indicating perpetual motion, errans , heading for?
  10. The perfective aspect, as Hirtle 1975 has shown, evokes something resultative: it represents the subject of the verb as being in the result phase of the event denoted by the past participle.
  11. Unlike the past participle and the -ing form, however, the infinitive does not evoke its event as partially or completely realized at the point in time where it is referred to its support, and so the incidence of the event to the support can itself be seen as a mere possibility.
  12. A word which has as an element either a past participle or a present participle, eg airborne, weatherbeaten, self-taught.

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