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  • ## It starts with the pronoun "be" for "it," which refers to the reason why. The pronoun "be" ("he, she, it") refers to just one individual or item. To make it plur
    192 KB (30,893 words) - 08:45, 6 February 2015
  • | she/it/he: pronoun: 3rd person: singular: honored | she/it/he: pronoun, 3rd person, singular, despised
    169 KB (27,145 words) - 12:15, 18 December 2015
  • '''a bu''' <small>[pronoun]</small> — ''a'' (letter) '''bu''' — turn one word into letter pronoun
    710 KB (115,361 words) - 08:13, 2 May 2018
  • ! '''person''' ||colspan="2"| '''subject pronoun''' ...m the categorisation for English because of the way the formal form of the pronoun ''you'' works in Lojban.
    77 KB (11,941 words) - 08:57, 30 June 2014
  • == Categorical pronoun set == * '''reu''' : [KOhA] categorical pronoun: person (prenu); Note: '''zo prenu cu eutca''' ('''eutca''' defined below);
    13 KB (1,757 words) - 12:34, 20 July 2016
  • Yes, I just feel that using the second person pronoun in vocatives ...xample, officially anaphorize the sumti behind {tu'a} with a coreferential pronoun (you can with a literal one, of couse, but then it means something differen
    4.12 MB (665,740 words) - 16:32, 2 March 2020
  • Yes, I just feel that using the second person pronoun in vocatives ...xample, officially anaphorize the sumti behind {tu'a} with a coreferential pronoun (you can with a literal one, of couse, but then it means something differen
    2.07 MB (380,774 words) - 07:40, 7 March 2020
  • '''3-32.''' lemi links a descriptor and a demonstrative pronoun to form a 'possessive' descriptor. levi links a descriptor and a tense to f ...ed. Typically, the speaker will physically indicate (demonstrate) what the pronoun stands for when using it. 'This' and 'that' are demonstratives in English.
    243 KB (42,050 words) - 13:59, 17 December 2014
  • ...without a quantifier) or is it a pronoun for indifferent terms or is it a pronoun for obvious terms or is it yet something else again. Much of the apparent v > open variable (one without a quantifier) or is it a pronoun for indifferent
    343 KB (53,196 words) - 08:07, 27 January 2015
  • ...ronouns or anaphoric expressions may also be called ''d-type'' or ''e-type pronoun'', depending on theoretical approach to [[interpretation (logic)|interpreta A donkey pronoun is a [[pronoun]] that is [[Bound variable pronoun|bound]] in [[semantics]] but not [[syntax]].<ref>
    16 KB (2,153 words) - 04:58, 19 October 2014
  • ...he word 'unicorn' contains yttrium" (or whatever the letter 'y', used as a pronoun, stands for). -phma > used as a pronoun, stands for). -phma
    67 KB (10,194 words) - 08:00, 27 January 2015
  • @mukti: I'm fine by "they" being used as an overall default pronoun. Is your pronoun hän? :)
    62 KB (10,411 words) - 21:41, 22 November 2022
  • ...ojban, there is a special imperative pronoun "ko". This is a second person pronoun logically equivalent to "do", the normal Lojban word for 'you', but conveyi ...beginning, but the embedded clause is in normal order, using the relative pronoun "ke'a" at the appropriate location to represent whatever is being elaborate
    441 KB (72,114 words) - 00:44, 18 August 2020
  • The latter, preferrably linking them with a pronoun a full form rather than a pronoun. Suppose
    195 KB (30,458 words) - 09:29, 27 January 2015
  • ...through a sequence in which changes may occur. While the norm is that the pronoun keeps the same referent(s) throughout, a mark is needed to indicate that th ...hat. The basic reference of the pronoun remains the general case, but the pronoun may take partitive quantifiers to indicate parts of that general referent,
    6 KB (977 words) - 08:26, 30 June 2014
  • ...so much at the lujvo, as at the fact that it was followed immediately by a pronoun, without a preposition. Two years of written Lojban, and now I notice the a ...he Hebrew type, with a marker at the beginning of the clause ("poi") and a pronoun within the clause referring back to the relativized argument ("ke'a").
    462 KB (78,745 words) - 18:34, 20 August 2020
  • Otherwise we seem to have just some odd pronoun. Otherwise we seem to have just some odd pronoun.
    158 KB (24,606 words) - 09:39, 27 January 2015
  • ...imperative form is understood as being in the second person (the subject [[pronoun]] ''you'' is usually omitted, although it can be included for emphasis), wi ...languages, even not normally [[null-subject language]]s, omit the subject pronoun in imperative sentences, as usually occurs in English (see [[#English|below
    16 KB (2,296 words) - 09:14, 30 June 2014
  • ...ed to something at a medium distance from the speaker, and the now-archaic pronoun “yon” to something far away. It is important to distinguish between the English pronoun “this” and the English adjective “this” as in “this boat”. The
    56 KB (8,955 words) - 06:49, 26 December 2017
  • the pronoun "ko'a" to something else my cat does not become that something > the pronoun "ko'a" to something else my cat does not become that
    608 KB (95,583 words) - 09:14, 27 January 2015

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