This article aims to find out why have a quick look and have a strange look for instance have to be analyzed differently though they are quite similar from a morphological point of view. It is the linguist’s task to point out which contextual elements favour one interpretation when the other is necessarily banned while in both cases the referent of the grammatical subject is a human being. Our enunciative approach will then lead us to question the validity of what is usually meant by such syntactic markers as “noun” and “indefinite article”, and we shall discuss the nature of the adjectives that can be used when the have a phrase refers to a process or to a property of the subject
This paper deals with the purported interchangeability between nouns and adjectives derived from nou...
Given the difficulties encountered by learners of French in deciding whether in a noun phrase an art...
The fourteen articles in this volume provide examples of work in three fields dealing with (1) lingu...
This article examines a theoretical point of view about the organisation of adjectives. Two major cl...
Of (Noun + ed) adjectives in English. The aspectual morpheme can be used in English to form denomin...
Our article tackles the subject of the creation of the adjectives in French language in recent years...
Jean-Claude Anecombre et Danielle Leeman : « La dérivation des adjectifs en -able : morphologie ou s...
This article is devoted to the morphology and the semantics of complex adjectives (i.e. adjectives f...
International audienceThis chapter deals with adjectives used as nouns in French. Such uses of adjec...
International audienceSince ancient times the overuse of adjectives, accused of weakening style, has...
Linguistic theories in general, and psychomechanics in particular, with its essentially binary model...
This volume offers a novel perspective in the syntax of articles in European languages arguing that ...
in English This dissertation studies su xal derivation of adjectives from nouns in French. It is bas...
National audienceThis article offers a study of French nouns referring to humans, such as pneumo- lo...
This article deals with a particular kind of subject complement, and in so doing discusses the notio...
This paper deals with the purported interchangeability between nouns and adjectives derived from nou...
Given the difficulties encountered by learners of French in deciding whether in a noun phrase an art...
The fourteen articles in this volume provide examples of work in three fields dealing with (1) lingu...
This article examines a theoretical point of view about the organisation of adjectives. Two major cl...
Of (Noun + ed) adjectives in English. The aspectual morpheme can be used in English to form denomin...
Our article tackles the subject of the creation of the adjectives in French language in recent years...
Jean-Claude Anecombre et Danielle Leeman : « La dérivation des adjectifs en -able : morphologie ou s...
This article is devoted to the morphology and the semantics of complex adjectives (i.e. adjectives f...
International audienceThis chapter deals with adjectives used as nouns in French. Such uses of adjec...
International audienceSince ancient times the overuse of adjectives, accused of weakening style, has...
Linguistic theories in general, and psychomechanics in particular, with its essentially binary model...
This volume offers a novel perspective in the syntax of articles in European languages arguing that ...
in English This dissertation studies su xal derivation of adjectives from nouns in French. It is bas...
National audienceThis article offers a study of French nouns referring to humans, such as pneumo- lo...
This article deals with a particular kind of subject complement, and in so doing discusses the notio...
This paper deals with the purported interchangeability between nouns and adjectives derived from nou...
Given the difficulties encountered by learners of French in deciding whether in a noun phrase an art...
The fourteen articles in this volume provide examples of work in three fields dealing with (1) lingu...