2. Resembling a pronoun, as by specifying a person, place, or thing, while functioning primarily as another part of speech. His in his choice is a pronominal adjective.
[Late Latin prōnōminālis, from Latin prōnōmen, prōnōmin-, pronoun : pro-, in place of; see pro-1 + nōmen, name, noun; see noun.]
Among their topics are ordering restrictions if both internal arguments are wh-phrases, Bulgarian pronouns: what they do not distinguish that most of Slavic does, the pluperfect in Bulgarian and Macedonian: from bai ganyo to the bombi, a glimpse into the acquisition of Bulgarian morphosyntax: pronominal clitics, and two declarative complementizers in Bulgarian.
In the description of verb morphology, Napiorkowska singles out the main lines of structural developments, such as the similarity between inflectional endings of the copula and the nominative pronominal endings (pp.
El libro no tiene capitulos, sino que se divide en los siguientes apartados: Concordancia, Sintaxis nominal, Sintaxis pronominal, Sintaxis verbal, Oracion simple, Oraciones coordinadas, Oraciones subordinadas, Oraciones adverbiales.
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