Sentence examples for same noun from inspiring English sources

Exact(12)

Wolfram Schütte, the veteran literary critic of the Frankfurter Rundschau newspaper, uses the same noun.

There are some unintended words that can be found, but each correct set has something in common; all the members form compound words when placed before the same noun.

What these examples show is that even with the same noun form, there is some ambiguity surrounding the nature of the representation.

Different authors later used the exact same noun referring to the morphological pattern of a different neuron type with axons distributed in the CA1 oriens and radiatum layers (though also extending into the subiculum), but dendrites limited to oriens [16].

Is there just one proper name 'Alice' or are there many homonyms ('Alice-1', 'Alice-2', etc).? On the one hand, it is tempting to infer the uniqueness of the name, on syntactic grounds, from the uniqueness of the proper noun (arguably the same noun recurs in the names 'Alice Waters and Alice Walker',', as well as in the phrase 'two famous Alices').

Goldsmith (2009) observes that in both ancient Greek and contemporary German the definite article can appear in several places within the same noun phrase (so that, for example, saying 'the sad clown is crying would involve the equivalent of 'the clown the sad is crying' in ancient Greek).

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Similar(48)

TIP OF THE WEEK: If you are working in Microsoft Word and find yourself using the same nouns and verbs over and over, the program's built-in thesaurus can make your writing less repetitious.

Infants in theone-name condition heard the same novel noun applied to all objects along the continuum; those in the two-name condition heard one name for objects from one end of the continuum and a second name for objects at the other end.

Aim to not use the same verbs, nouns, augmentatives, diminutives and superlatives more than one time in the same paragraph.

Nouns are inflected in the same way: the noun "conētl" means not just "child", but also "it is a child", and ticonētl means "you are a child".

noun or adjective—When EXP is not found in the conceptual basis, the user is shown a set of pre-existing concepts in the base, which are: (i) semantically related (e.g., synonyms); (ii) named with the same root of noun or adjective; (iii) named with the primitive form of noun; (iv) nouns related to adjective.

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