Academic literature on the topic 'Insubordinate clauses'

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Journal articles on the topic "Insubordinate clauses"

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Maschler, Yael. "The on-line emergence of Hebrew insubordinate she- (‘that/which/who’) clauses." Studies in Language 42, no. 3 (2018): 669–707. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/sl.17065.mas.

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Abstract This study examines the on-line emergence of insubordinate clauses in Hebrew conversation as constrained by local interactional contingencies, questioning traditional notions of grammatical ‘subordination’ and contributing to conceptions of grammar as a locally sensitive, temporally unfolding resource for social interaction. The clauses examined are syntactically unintegrated (unembedded in any matrix clause), or loosely-integrated (cannot be viewed unambiguously as constituting a relative, complement, or adverbial clause), yet they all begin with she- – the general ‘subordinating con
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Mas Indrawati, Ni Luh Ketut. "Complementiser and Relativiser in the English Subordinate Clauses." Lingual: Journal of Language and Culture 3, no. 1 (2017): 2. http://dx.doi.org/10.24843/ljlc.2017.v03.i01.p01.

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Words combine to form larger units; phrases, clauses, and sentences. The study of the structure of phrases, clauses, and sentences is referred to as syntax. Quirk, et, all (1985:47) distinguishes sentences into two types they are; simple sentences and multiple sentences which cover compound sentences and complex sentences. A simple sentence consists of one independent clause, a multiple clause contains more than one clauses, a compound sentence consists of two or more independent clauses, while a complex sentence consists of insubordinate and subordinate clauses.Subordinate clause, in embeddin
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Verstraete, Jean-Christophe, Sarah D'Hertefelt, and An Van linden. "A typology of complement insubordination in Dutch." Studies in Language 36, no. 1 (2012): 123–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/sl.36.1.04ver.

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This paper presents an analysis of complement insubordination in Dutch, i.e. structures that are formally marked as subordinate complement clauses but conventionally used as main clauses. We develop a typology of seven distinct construction types (in three semantic domains), none of which have been analyzed in detail before. From a more general perspective, we show that insubordinate constructions provide a fresh perspective on the analysis of modality and evaluation, with semantic parameters that are not found in more typical exponents like modal verbs. In addition, we show that it is difficu
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Sansiñena, María Sol, Hendrik De Smet, and Bert Cornillie. "Between subordinate and insubordinate. Paths toward complementizer-initial main clauses." Journal of Pragmatics 77 (February 2015): 3–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pragma.2014.12.004.

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Pérez Fernández, Sofía, Pedro Gras, and Frank Brisard. "Semantic polyfunctionality and constructional networks." Constructions and Frames 13, no. 1 (2021): 82–125. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/cf.00048.fer.

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Abstract This paper offers an analysis of insubordinate subjunctive complement clauses (ISCs) in Spanish and aims to contribute to the general debate in Construction Grammar on how to deal with a highly pragmatically specified surface form that expresses several meanings. We explore whether the meanings expressed by ISCs are encoded in the construction or can be derived via independently existing principles of pragmatic interpretation. The results of the analysis are represented in a constructional network.
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Holvoet, Axel, Anna Daugavet, and Liina Lindström. "Insubordinated concessive imperatives." Baltic Linguistics 10 (December 31, 2019): 307–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.32798/bl.367.

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The article deals with a constructional idiom attested in both Baltic languages as well as in the neighbouring Slavonic and Fennic languages and in Yiddish, containing as its central component what is argued to be an insubordinated imperatival concessive clause and characterising a situation by hyperbolically describing the consequences conceivably flowing from it or a course of action it could be imagined to induce. This construction, which is clearly an areal feature, has a stable constructional meaning but its formal shape is extraordinarily fluid and differentiated. It also displays a cons
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Sang, Zhonglin. "Insubordinate Conditional Clauses Formed by Japanese Conjunction -ba." International Journal of Linguistics, Literature and Translation 4, no. 2 (2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.32996/ijllt.2021.4.2.6.

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Insubordination describes the phenomenon that a subordinate clause is used independently as a main clause. Insubordinate clauses endorse discourse functions alone without connecting with any apodosis. Many researchers studied this phenomenon from a typology perspective, clarifying the discourse functions and forming mechanism. However, those studies pursuit the cross-language features too much, investigating large numbers of languages and source constructions. As a result, their conclusion may not fit a specific language or construction. This paper aims to verify and complement the classificat
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Insubordinate clauses"

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Elvira, García Wendy. "La prosodia de las construcciones insubordinadas conectivo-argumentativas del español." Doctoral thesis, Universitat de Barcelona, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10803/400949.

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Esta tesis aborda el estudio prosódico de las construcciones independientes con marcas de subordinación en español (construcciones insubordinadas). Se plantean tres objetivos principales: el primero, metodológico, la creación de programas que facilitan el análisis prosódico de datos; el segundo, descriptivo, la descripción prosódica de las oraciones insubordinadas conectivo-argumentativas y elípticas del español; y el tercero, de carácter teórico, la posibilidad de usar los resultados prosódicos para aportar luz a la teoría de la insubordinación, y en particular, el hecho de esclare
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Book chapters on the topic "Insubordinate clauses"

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Kaltenböck, Gunther. "On the grammatical status of insubordinate if-clauses." In Studies in Language Companion Series. John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/slcs.178.12kal.

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"13 The Expression of Directive Meaning: A Corpus-Based Study on the Variation between Imperatives, Conditionals, and Insubordinate If-Clauses in Spoken British English." In Corpus linguistics on the move. Brill | Rodopi, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004321342_014.

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