negative particle in a sentence
Examples
- In Burmese, negation is accomplished by prefixing a negative particle ( " ma . " ) to the verb being negated.
- The pronominal clitic is not present in ( 9 ), but is suffixed onto the preverbal negative particle in ( 8 ).
- In Welsh, the negative particle " ddim " cannot be immediately followed by an object noun phrase, as the following examples show.
- Negative particle syntax is parallel to Mandarin about 70 % of the time, although lexical terms used differ from those in Mandarin.
- In French, a second negative particle " pas " ( or literarily " point " ) is normally employed in simple negation.
- In Italian, a second following negative particle " non " turns the phrase into a positive one, but with a slightly different meaning.
- The following is an example of a negative nominal sentence in the present tense, using the formal Arabic negative particle " laysa ".
- This means that the negative particle will precede the verb in Chittagonian, where the corresponding Bengali version would have a negative particle following the verb.
- One noticeable trait of Ulster Irish, Manx Gaelic and Scots Gaelic is the use of the negative particle in place of the Munster and Connacht.
- However, if the answer expected is negative, then a negative particle and the full form " aris " are added right after " xom ":