athematic उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The new ending, " *-sei ", carried over into all three branches of Balto-Slavic and came to be used in all athematic root verbs in Baltic.
- The singular aorist indicative active of some athematic verbs ( ??????, ????; ??????, ???? ) uses a stem formed by the suffix-?? and takes first aorist rather than root aorist endings.
- In many Slavic languages, particularly South and West Slavic, the athematic ending was analogically extended to other verbs and even replaced the thematic ending completely in some languages ( Slovene, Serbo-Croatian ).
- Verbs forming the underived thematic presents are overwhelmingly bivalent / transitive, and there are no statives in the Late PIE thematic inflection since all the original Early PIE statives either remained athematic presents, or they became Western PIE perfects.
- Again, athematic nouns show ablaut and accent shifts, mainly between the " strong " cases ( nominative and vocative in all numbers, and accusative singular / dual ) and the " weak " cases ( all others ).
- In the descendant languages, athematic verbs were often extended with a thematic vowel, likely because of the complications resulting from the consonant clusters formed when the mostly consonant-initial endings were added directly onto the mostly consonant-final stems.
- While Old English still contrasted " vowel stems " ( thematic ) and " consonant stems " ( athematic ), this distinction is no longer a meaningful one in Modern English, and other languages whose morphology has been drastically simplified by analogy.
- In many common grammatical forms such as the nominative plural of o-stems, the second person imperative, in the second singular of athematic verbs and in the dative singular of the clitic personal pronouns, * ai became * + .
- The present tense descended from the original PIE present imperfective, although there were a few verbs with a present tense that descended from the aorist, in some cases even the aorist subjunctive ( which for athematic verbs was identical to the thematic present ).
- The plethora of mallet percussion and the resolutely athematic texture bring to mind the Stockhausen of " Gruppen " for three orchestras ( or " Carre, " for four ) and the Boulez of " Le Marteau Sans Maitre ."