Semantics 1, SoSe 2014: Wiki-based term papers: Difference between revisions
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{ Why is the following sentence grammatically incorrect? What is the mistake: "missing preposition", "wrong preposition", "wrong word order", "missing determiner"? | { Why is the following sentence grammatically incorrect? What is the mistake: "missing preposition", "wrong preposition", "wrong word order", "missing determiner"? | ||
| type="{}" } | | type="{}" } | ||
Snape lives dungeon. { missing preposition | Snape lives dungeon. { missing preposition} { missing determiner }. | ||
|| missing preposition and missing determiner. Correct sentence: Snape lives in a dungeon. | || missing preposition and missing determiner. Correct sentence: Snape lives in a dungeon. | ||
Revision as of 13:26, 27 September 2014
Warning:
The material on this page has been created as part of a seminar. It is still heavily under construction and we do not guarantee its correctness. If you have comments on this page or suggestions for improvement, please contact Manfred Sailer.
This note will be removed once the page has been carefully checked and integrated into the main part of this wiki.
The following pages link to material created by students in partial fulfillment of the course requirements for the class Semantics 1, summer term 2014, Frankfurt.
Back to the course page.
Syntatic Tree Structure
Why do we need syntactic trees?
Constructing syntacic trees can be rather tricky at the beginning of your linguistic studies. Nonetheless, it is important to understand the structure and apply this knowledge to various sentences by yourself. In order to do so, we have created an introductory video. Enjoy!
Video
Excercises
Task 1