geoffrey leech造句
例句與造句
- Geoffrey Leech created the politeness maxims : tact, generosity, approbation, modesty, agreement, and sympathy.
- Dr . Geoffrey Leech was a contributor to the organization from the first meeting, where he organized a workshop entitled'Watching English Grammar Change '.
- The term " treebank " was coined by linguist Geoffrey Leech in the 1980s, by analogy to other repositories such as a seedbank or bloodbank.
- The prize was awarded to Style in Fiction by Geoffrey Leech and Mick Short, originally published by Longman in 1981, and a special symposium, hosted by the two authors, was held in Lancaster in March 2006.
- ""'A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language " "'( ISBN 9780582517349 ) is a descriptive grammar of English written by Randolph Quirk, Sidney Greenbaum, Geoffrey Leech, and Jan Svartvik.
- It's difficult to find geoffrey leech in a sentence. 用geoffrey leech造句挺難的
- Many well-known linguists have spent time doing research at the Survey, including Bas Aarts, Valerie Adams, John Algeo, Dwight Bolinger, No雔 Burton-Roberts, David Crystal, Derek Davy, Jan Firbas, Sidney Greenbaum, Liliane Haegeman, Robert Ilson, Ruth Kempson, Geoffrey Leech, Jan Rusiecki, Jan Svartvik, and Joe Taglicht.
- Some reviewers and in fact also its authors consider it a complement rather than a replacement of the former since it follows-with few exceptions ( for example in the typology of adverbials )-the grammatical framework and concepts from ComGEL, which is also corroborated by the fact that one of LGSWE's authors, Geoffrey Leech, is also a co-author of ComGEL.
- ""'Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English " "'( LGSWE ) is a descriptive grammar of English written by Douglas Biber, Stig Johansson, Geoffrey Leech, Susan Conrad, and Edward Finegan, first published by Longman in 1999 . It is an authoritative description of modern English, a successor to " A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language " ( ComGEL ) published in 1985 and a predecessor of the " Cambridge Grammar of the English Language " ( CamGEL ) published in 2002.
- :: That's sort of how I interpreted it, implying slow movements of your extremities while steering, shifting, and hitting the pedals . " A Communicative Grammar of English " ( by Geoffrey Leech and Jan Svartvik ) states : " There is no difference in meaning between " drive slow " and " drive slowly " or " buy cheap " and " buy cheaply ", but the adjective form tends to be more informal . "---talk 23 : 44, 31 January 2008 ( UTC)