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Topic: Object (grammar)



  
 Lingua::LinkParser - Perl module implementing the Link Grammar Parser by Sleator, Temperley and Lafferty at CMU.
To quote the Link Grammar documentation, ``the Link Grammar Parser is a syntactic parser of English, based on link grammar, an original theory of English syntax.
Only for link objects created via a word object, this returns the number of the word which the link points *to* from the object that created it.
Only for link objects created via a word object, this returns the word text which the link points *to* from the object that created it.
http://cpan.uwinnipeg.ca/htdocs/Lingua-LinkParser/Lingua/LinkParser.html

  
 Attribute grammar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In a practical way, an attribute grammar defines the information that will need to be in the abstract syntax tree in order to successfully perform semantic analysis.
When constructing a language translation tool, such as a compiler, an attribute grammar is the formal expression of the syntax-derived semantic checks associated with a grammar.
The strength of attribute grammars is that they can transport information from anywhere in the abstract syntax tree to anywhere else, in a controlled way.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attribute_grammar   (314 words)

  
 Grammar_Partsofspeech
Like a direct object, an indirect object also receives the action of the verb.
An indirect object is a noun or pronoun in the predicate that precedes the direct object and indicates to whom or for whom the action of the verb is done.
The subject and/or predicate may consist of a single word or many words, depending upon the complexity of the sentence.
http://www.geocities.com/muslowords/Grammar_Partsofspeech.html   (314 words)

  
 RDF/XML Syntax Specification (Revised)
Predicates are RDF URI references and can be interpreted as either a relationship between the two nodes or as defining an attribute value (object node) for some subject node.
This is done by using the RDF URI reference of the object node as the value of an XML attribute
The formal grammar for the syntax is annotated with actions generating triples of the RDF graph as defined in RDF Concepts and Abstract Syntax.
http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-syntax-grammar   (314 words)

  
 Object -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
Direct (A tangible and visible entity; an entity that can cast a shadow) object and (The object that is the recipient or beneficiary of the action of the verb) indirect object ((Studies of the formation of basic linguistic units) grammar)
In (The sciences concerned with gathering and manipulating and storing and retrieving and classifying recorded information) information processing, an object is a (Instrumentality that combines interrelated interacting artifacts designed to work as a coherent entity) system which transmits information to an (An expert who observes and comments on something) observer.
raising an (The speech act of objecting) objection, an act where an attorney in a ((law) legal proceedings consisting of the judicial examination of issues by a competent tribunal) trial protests an act or evidence by the opposing side or their representation that violates the rules of the court.
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/o/ob/object.htm   (450 words)

  
 10. A Grammar Toolkit. The American Heritage Book of English Usage. 1996
See Grammar, adjectives, comparison of and adverbs, comparison of.
See Grammar, pronouns, reflexive and intensive and so.
A word that is used to name a person, place, thing, quality, or action and can function as the subject or object of a verb, as the object of a preposition, or as an appositive.
http://www.bartleby.com/64/10.html   (3789 words)

  
 Predicate (grammar) - Wikipedia
The secondary predicate in this case is ambiguous between standing in a nexus with the subject of the sentence or with the object of the sentence.
In traditional grammar, a predicate is one of the two main parts of a sentence (the other being the subject, which the predicate modifies).
In formal semantics a predicate is thought of as an expression of the semantic type of sets.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Predicate_(grammar)   (3789 words)

  
 Parent Primer: Grammar
Edward is the subject; gave is the predicate; Leah is the indirect object; roses is the direct object.
A phrase is a group of words that lack a subject and/or predicate.
Get a grip on grammar so you can help your child parse the parts of speech.
http://www.scholastic.com/familymatters/parentguides/primers/grammar.htm   (3789 words)

  
 Go With Grammar!
Thus a gerund phrase can act as the subject, direct object, indirect object, predicate nominative, and object of a preposition.
Below is a list of online resources that you can use to expand your knowledge of subject and predicate.
This concludes the section on subject and predicate.
http://www.wiu.edu/users/mfamf/gogrammar/sentences.html   (3789 words)

  
 Object Oriented API for LL1 Parser
This project is to create an object oriented parser generator.
The format for the grammar will be ISO EBNF.
A file containing the grammar for the language.
http://odin.himinbi.org/ll_1_parser   (3789 words)

  
 Object-based PLs page of Rainer Blome
The grammar is NOT an object, it is written in a modified BNF form.
A pure OOL with multi-methods, a prototype-based object model, computed inheritance, module-based encapsulation, and allows to mix statically- and dynamically-typed code.
I prefer the term object- based because that's what they are.
http://www.pasteur.fr/~letondal/object-based.html   (1240 words)

  
 Re: [Finale] Garritan and other stuff
So there's a difference between "changing the grammar" -- which effectively means you're changing the language -- and making a grammatical change, like switching the subject and object in a sentence.
To me (and to linguists), "changing the grammar" means changing the *rules* of grammar -- for instance, changing from a Subject-Verb-Object grammar like English to a Subject-Object-Verb language like Japanese.
In order to decode the meaning, you need to determine which word is the subject and which word is the object, and the words themselves don't reveal that information.
http://www.mail-archive.com/finale@shsu.edu/msg08243.html   (479 words)

  
 Object
Object (grammar) In transitive verb is one of its core argumentss, which generally represents the target of the verb's a...
Object (computer science) In computer science, an object is a data structure (incorporating data and methods) whose inst...
Object language Object language is a term used in computer science.
http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/object.html   (1604 words)

  
 fmsl.fmsl
For example, in nearly all denotational and * attribute-grammar definitions of programming languages, arithmetic and * logical operators are considered primitive.
To avoid * conflict between attribute names and object field names, all attribute names * are conventionally suffixed with an underscore.
There are Environment and Store attributes * which model, respectively, the static and dynamic semantics of the language.
http://www.csc.calpoly.edu/~gfisher/projects/fmsl/specification/fmsl.fmsl   (881 words)

  
 The Project Gutenberg eBook of An English Grammar, by W.M. Baskervill & J.W. Sewell.
So many slighting remarks have been made of late on the use of teaching grammar as compared with teaching science, that it is plain the fact has been lost sight of that grammar is itself a science.
The province of English grammar is, rightly considered, wider than is indicated by any one of the above definitions; and the student ought to have a clear idea of the ground to be covered.
language historically, that it is very hazardous to make rules in grammar: what is at present regarded as correct may not be so twenty years from now, even if our rules are founded on the keenest scrutiny of the "standard" writers of our time.
http://www.geocities.com/aglyphe/etexts/english_grammar.html   (13541 words)

  
 Analyzing English Grammar (pt.I)
The core of this text attempts to provide students with a good working knowledge of such features as they have to do with the more formal aspects of functional grammar, and to allow students to utilize this working knowledge to build "syntactic trees" (diagramming) one feature at a time.
Much of Feature Theory is concerned with the "morphology" aspect of grammar; however, as we shall see later on, Features may spill-over or percolate from one word to another thus affecting the overall syntax of a sentence.
This is because the complement/object functions as a quasi-reflexive in conjunction with the nominal/subject.
http://www.csun.edu/~galasso/completehandbook.htm   (8809 words)

  
 Two-Level Grammar as an Object-Oriented Requirements Specification Language
Two-Level Grammar (TLG) is proposed as an object-oriented requirements specification language with a natural language (NL) style but sufficiently formal to allow automatic transformation of the TLG specification into formal specifications in VDM++, an object-oriented version of the Vienna Development Method.
This software specification approach is supported by a specification development environment (SDE) for constructing TLG specifications and a natural language processing system to assist in translating an NL requirements specification into TLG.
The system described is a useful and constructive tool for automating the production of software systems from NL specifications.
http://csdl2.computer.org/persagen/DLAbsToc.jsp?resourcePath=/dl/proceedings/&toc=comp/proceedings/hicss/2002/1435/09/1435toc.xml&DOI=10.1109/HICSS.2002.994486   (258 words)

  
 Attribute grammar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In a practical way, an attribute grammar defines the information that will need to be in the abstract syntax tree in order to successfully perform semantic analysis.
When constructing a language translation tool, such as a compiler, an attribute grammar is the formal expression of the syntax-derived semantic checks associated with a grammar.
The strength of attribute grammars is that they can transport information from anywhere in the abstract syntax tree to anywhere else, in a controlled way.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attribute_grammar   (314 words)

  
 Object
Object (grammar) In transitive verb is one of its core argumentss, which generally represents the target of the verb's a...
Object (computer science) In computer science, an object is a data structure (incorporating data and methods) whose inst...
Object language Object language is a term used in computer science.
http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/object.html   (314 words)

  
 Object Pascal Style Guide
If the rules of Pascal grammar force you to combine multiple header files into a single unit, then use the name of the base unit into which you are folding the other files.
Object Pascal doesn't support nesting comments of the same type within each other, so really there is only one level of comment nesting: curly inside of starparen, and starparen inside of curly.
Object Pascal source is divided up primarily into units and Delphi Project files, which both follow the same conventions.
http://community.borland.com/soapbox/techvoyage/article/1,1795,10280,00.html   (4461 words)

  
 Attribute grammar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In a practical way, an attribute grammar defines the information that will need to be in the abstract syntax tree in order to successfully perform semantic analysis.
When constructing a language translation tool, such as a compiler, an attribute grammar is the formal expression of the syntax-derived semantic checks associated with a grammar.
The strength of attribute grammars is that they can transport information from anywhere in the abstract syntax tree to anywhere else, in a controlled way.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attribute_grammar   (314 words)

  
 CSI: Man6
In Tesniäre's 'dependency grammar', the sentence-meaning was viewed compositionally, where the subject, object, and indirect object were non-heterogeneously defined as 'actants' participating in a theatre-like act ('a little drama')(Tesniäre 1959).
And, as the metaphorical extensions are often culturally-motivated, it may be possible to map the metaphorization trajectories for different languages in relation to certain universal object / action schemas.
We also suggest that since 'grammar' is schematically and metaphorically structured, grammatical differences will parallel cultural differences.
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/epc/srb/cyber/man6.html   (314 words)

  
 Grammar Writer's Workbench for Lexical Functional Grammar
The system has an elaborate mouse-driven interface for displaying various grammatical structures and substructures--the idea is to help a linguist understand and debug a grammar without having to comprehend the details of specific processing algorithms.
Below, the F-structures (sets of pairs of attributes and values; attributes may be features, such as tense and gender, or functions, such as subject and object.) are mapped out, and properties such as tense and subject are delineated.
Grammatical functions are not derived from phrase structure configurations, but are represented at the parallel level of functional structure (site).
http://www.tomashoffman.com/academics/cogsci2/assignments/assignment01/grammar_writer.html   (327 words)

  
 Overview of Greek Grammar
The following table shows the most common parts of speech in Greek, and whether their morphology is influenced by certain aspects of grammar (shown on the columns of the table).
One would not need a direct object for this verb then, because the direct object (“myself”) is already given by the added morpheme.
The following tenses exist in both Modern and Ancient Greek (you will see them presented usually in the same order in Greek grammar books):
http://www.cogsci.indiana.edu/farg/harry/lan/grkgram.htm   (1828 words)

  
 Unified Modeling Language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The constraints of distributed system development are not an inherent part of UML, much as the plot of a novel is not part of the rules of grammar.
For example, it is not possible to specify using UML that an object "lives" in a server process and that it is shared among various instances of a running process.
UML is also considered to be incomplete for business application development and that it needs to be extended beyond object and component technology to make it useful.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_Modeling_Language   (2147 words)

  
 Object-based PLs page of Rainer Blome
The grammar is NOT an object, it is written in a modified BNF form.
A pure OOL with multi-methods, a prototype-based object model, computed inheritance, module-based encapsulation, and allows to mix statically- and dynamically-typed code.
I prefer the term object- based because that's what they are.
http://www.pasteur.fr/~letondal/object-based.html   (2147 words)

  
 Dr. Grammar - Frequently Asked Questions
In a simple sense, grammar is the study of words and the ways words work together.
According to The Grammar Bible, grammar "is the regular system of rules that we use to weave sounds into the meaningful units with which we express our thoughts and ideas, creating language.
And if after reading Dr. Grammar's response, you still want to learn more, click here and follow the prompts to your question for additional explanations and examples.
http://www.drgrammar.org/faqs   (11486 words)

  
 UML object constraint language in Meta-Modeling
By constructing the meta-model of OCL expression in ATOM3, we will have a better understanding of OCL, and it helps us to define a grammar which later could be used in yacc to build a OCL parser.
After the OCL expression is parsed, we will have a graphical abstract syntax tree which can be used to check errors when parsing complicated OCL constaints.
OCL is formal language that remains easy to read and write.
http://moncs.cs.mcgill.ca/people/wbliang/NSERC_2002/report.html   (2663 words)

  
 Object-based PLs page of Rainer Blome
The grammar is NOT an object, it is written in a modified BNF form.
A pure OOL with multi-methods, a prototype-based object model, computed inheritance, module-based encapsulation, and allows to mix statically- and dynamically-typed code.
Objects cannot be modified once created (but you can replace them with a modified copy).
http://www-alt.pasteur.fr/~letondal/object-based.html   (1240 words)

  
 ELI Grammar Hotline
Traditional grammar teaches us that “whom” is used as the object and that “who” is used as the subject.
In other cases, the "ungrammaticality" is probably due to an attempt to sound "important" or "educated" by using words and structures that are not part of the writer's actual grammar (and, consequently, using them incorrectly).
You’ve happened upon one of the many areas of English grammar that is ambiguous.
http://www.udel.edu/eli/grammar.html   (11750 words)

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