Thursday, April 27, 2006

‘Additional accusatives in Latin and Ancient Greek: Arguments against arguments’

From ru.nl:

Additional accusatives in Latin and Ancient Greek: Arguments against arguments

Abstract. In Latin and Ancient Greek we find accusatives in places where one would not expect them: as complements of intransitive verbs and adjectives and as second complements of transitive verbs. In this paper we argue on the basis of a variety of evidence that these additional accusatives should not be analyzed as direct objects, but rather as predicate modifiers. In this way we can maintain the basic distinction between intransitive and transitive verbs.

Corien Bary
Department of Philosophy, Radboud University Nijmegen

Peter de Swart
Department of Linguistics, Radboud University Nijmegen

Posted by Nathan Bierma on 04/27 at 09:48 PM
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‘On Language’ 4/26 - These invented words didn’t come ‘gladually’

Lexicolumn: This week’s space reserved for creation of words
On Language
Chicago Tribune
April 26, 2006
By Nathan Bierma
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...
Doctopus: Veterinarian specializing in cephalopods.

Meteurology: The science of predicting the weather based on bladder habits.

Mistery: Inexplicable unhappiness.

Stragedy: A detailed plan for handling a catastrophe.

—Ted Mellow, Buffalo Grove

...

Posted by Nathan Bierma on 04/27 at 09:45 PM
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