- to
refer to
converbs include adverbial participle,
conjunctive participle, gerund,
gerundive and
verbal adverb (Ylikoski 2003).
Converbs are differentiated...
- such as
participles and
converbs. The
imperfect is
formed with the
suffix -mbi,
which is
derived from the
imperfect converb ending -me and the co****...
- a teacher."
Converbs Converbs, a
characteristic of many
Turkic languages,
express sequential or
dependent action.
Present tense converbs are
formed by...
-
predicatively without a co****. They are
listed in the
following table.
Converbs are used as
modifiers of the
finite verb and
their subject is normally...
-
participles and gerunds. Non-finite verb
forms in some
other languages include converbs,
gerundives and supines. The
categories of mood, tense, and or
voice may...
- теннистээ, “to play tennis”,
created by
attaching the
suffix -тээ.
Sakha converbs end in -(A)n as
opposed to
Common Turkic -(I)B. They
express simultaneous...
- 'participle' has been
applied to
forms that are
alternatively regarded as
converbs (see
Sirenik below), gerunds, gerundives, transgressives, and nominalised...
-
infinitive phrase). Like
other non-finite verb
forms (like participles,
converbs,
gerunds and gerundives),
infinitives do not
generally have an expressed...
-
Preterite and
Optative for Subjunctive. In Armenian,
gerunds /
gerundives /
converbs (verbal noun) are
interchangeable with an
English relative clause. For...
- vin- " to hear", -nā (with /aː/) is used instead.
Telugu has two
types of
converbs,
present and past.
These are
heavily used to form
compound sentences. ఇంటికి...