Many items are still found in English textbooks which were felt by Rivlin to have no functional value, e . g . noun as substantive, abstract noun, person and case of noun, participial phrases, principal clause.
32.
But in Pahari and Kashmiri it must be derived from the rare Sanskrit particle " * rcchitas ", gone, for in these languages it is a participial tense and does change according to the gender of the subject.
33.
:: The second link presupposes that participial "-ed " has no etymological connection with preterite "-ed ", which is not absolutely clear . . . talk ) 18 : 38, 1 December 2011 ( UTC)
34.
All of these developments appear to reflect changes in spoken Middle Indo-Aryan; among the past tenses, for example, only the aorist survived into early Middle Indo-Aryan, which was later displaced by a participial past tense.
35.
Several " tonal melodies " may be assigned to certain verbal conjugations based on the desired mood ( for example, with many verb conjugations the only difference between the indicative mood and the participial sub-mood is one of tone ).
36.
So an embedded participial clause like " claiming that they are wise " or " Those who claim that they are wise " is declined this way-in any of the following word ordering, but in slightly different each time meaning / topicalization:
37.
Other tests that have been studied involve passivization ( see Impersonal passive voice ), " ne " / " en " cliticization in Italian and French, and impersonal, participial, and resultative constructions in a wide range of languages.
38.
Over and over, Ferry alludes to this something, elusive partly as the result of the ambivalent gifts of time . Down by the River describes a scene s participial rhythm, / / Flowing, enjoying, taking its own sweet time.
39.
The difference is that the participial phrase of a dangling participle is intended to modify a particular noun, but is instead erroneously attached to a different noun, whereas a participial phrase serving as an absolute clause is not intended to modify any noun at all.
40.
The difference is that the participial phrase of a dangling participle is intended to modify a particular noun, but is instead erroneously attached to a different noun, whereas a participial phrase serving as an absolute clause is not intended to modify any noun at all.