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  • An inflectional future is found in several modern Romance languages, e.g in Italian, French and Spain. These future forms derive from the Latin Infinitive + ''
    9 KB (1,339 words) - 22:00, 19 September 2009
  • ...2003. "Degrees of grammatical productivity in inflectional morphology", ''Italian Journal of Linguistics'' 15 ...derivation: a comparison between corpus-based and lexicographical data”, ''Italian Journal of Linguistics'' 15
    36 KB (5,037 words) - 19:59, 20 July 2014
  • ...op is prohibited. Unlike the situation in languages like [[Spanish]] and [[Italian]], ''pro'' drop in Irish is never optional.
    13 KB (1,654 words) - 20:27, 4 July 2014
  • *Squartini, M. 2008. Lexical vs. grammatical evidentiality in French and Italian. ''Linguistics'', 917-947.
    13 KB (1,794 words) - 11:45, 27 May 2014
  • ...ending on the addressee. For instance, it knows that it has to address the Italian-speaking father differently than the German-speaking mother. But still it d
    18 KB (2,684 words) - 16:51, 22 May 2013
  • Bentley D 2006: ''Split intransitivity in Italian'', Berlin-New York. Burzio L 1986: ''Italian Syntax: a Government-Binding Approach'', Dordrecht.
    47 KB (6,479 words) - 20:24, 4 July 2014
  • | [[Italian]] || ita || Italy, Switzerland || [[Indo-European]] || [[Romance]] || 59,39
    91 KB (8,054 words) - 23:49, 30 August 2022

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