THE GERMAN STRONG VERBS IN FIRST AND SECOND LANGUAGE ACQUISITION: A HIERARCHY FOR THEIR INTRODUCTIONdoi:10.1515/iral.1984.22.3.239Renate BornInternational Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching
“is contrasted with” would probably be a bit too strong). “Die Rolle” is the subject of the sentence. It is modified by the genitive “des Lateinischen”. “Im Osten” is short for “in dem Osten”/in the east. “auch” has the force of “also”. “die vielfältigen ...
As in English, German has two types of verbs. They’re referred to as strong verbs and weak verbs. Weak verbs are regular verbs. This means that they follow regular, predictable rules for the present and past tense in German. Strong verbs, on the other hand, are irregular and don’t f...
And as we’ve learned the pronoun to replace sentences or verbs is… es, or it. In English, this it is often called a dummy pronoun or dummy subject. These constructions are very common Es ist langweilig, immer das gleiche zu essen. It‘s boring to eat the same all the time. ▶...
Is the lexical representation of a complex verb with respect to its base different from that of two verbs with different bases? We refer to the former relation—between verbs with the same base—as semantic transparency, and to the latter—the relation between verbs with different bases—as ...
This is different from other uses of these terms; for instance, Leu (2015) takes the extended projection of nouns, verbs, and adjectives to fall into three domains: a lexical layer, an inflectional layer, and a left periphery. The fixed syntactic alignment is clearly expressed for adjectives ...
on the holistic concept of social-ecological systems, three analytical perspectives were introduced, the social system, the energy system, and the three principles of strong sustainability, which inspired three questions: What is the “horizon of attention” regarding the stages of the energy system?
Given this, there is no contrast to van Gelderen’s (2017) observation that in OE, the subjunctive can follow all types of verbs. The point is where it alternates with the indicative and where it doesn’t. We list Giannakidou’s (1995:100; 1998: 77–78, 163, Section 3.3 p. 128–...
A Generalized Theory of Ablaut: the Case of Modern German Strong Verbs. Models of Inflection, edited by Albert Ortmann, Ray Fabri & Teresa Parodi, 28-59. Tubingen: Niemeyer.SCHEER, Tobias ; SEGERAL, Philippe (1998). A generalized theory of ablaut : the case of Modern German strong verbs...
Modern German - Strong verbs - Principal parts generalisation hypothesis - Word and paradigm morphologyExisting accounts of the German strong verbs show notable confusion about their historical development and remarkable diversity with regard to their systemic conceptualisation. Using a principal parts ...