释义 |
Examples:(past tense marker used before verb or clause)—cannot (see, hear, understand, as verb complement)—(after a verb or adjective) one who (is) ...—(adverbial expression indicating that the attention of the subject of the verb is focused on what they are doing, not distracted by anything else)—part of speech (noun, verb, adjective etc)—it'd be a wonder if... (following a verb phrase that is usually negative)—(when used after a verb) times or fold—by (introduces passive verb)—verb-object construction—serial verb construction—(after a verb) indicating the beginning and continuation of an action or a state—suffix forming adjective from verb—(used after a verb) into, in—subject-object-verb SOV or subject-object-predicate sentence pattern (e.g. in Japanese or Korean grammar)—subject-verb-object SVO or subject-predicate-object sentence pattern (e.g. in Chinese grammar)—extremely (placed after verb or adjective)—(after verb) give it a try—(after verb of motion, indicates motion down and towards us, also fig.)—structural particle: used before a verb or adjective, linking it preceding modifying adverbial adjunct—(used after a verb) extremely—(verb complement indicating success)—(after a verb, indicates coming out, completion of an action, or ability discern or detect)—(used after a verb) give it a go—structural particle: used after a verb (or adjective as main verb), linking it following phrase indicating effect, degree, possibility etc—(after a verb of motion indicates movement away from the speaker) interj—auxiliary verb introducing future action: may (be able to)—(before polysyllabic verb) handle it—(followed by a verb) slightly—object (of a transitive verb)—(linguistics) stative verb— |