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ok pero de que tiene que tener los textos?
itxmery:
verbal tenses, conditionals, reported speech, conjunctions...
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Nouns are words whose referents are classes of fixed entities, there are no states of facts or grammatical relations. Personal pronouns in each context have a referent but this one changes from context to context, for example: "I" has no fixed reference but depends on who speaks. For their part, the verbs designate the states of facts, the processes or the relations between entities, whereas the prepositions generally indicate abstract relations. Syntactically, nouns function as nuclei of nominal phrases, that is, as arguments of the verb or complements of the name.
Common names allow naming all people, animals or things of the same class or species, without specifying their meaning as man, horse, house. They group the objects they call by their characteristics, without expressing distinctive features. Therefore, they are considered generic nouns.Proper names identify and individualize a being to differentiate it from others of the same class. Among the proper names are the anthroponyms, which are the names and nicknames of people, such as Ramon, Carmen and Lola, and place names, which are the names of geographical places, such as Aguadulce and Almeria. They have a unique reference and lack linguistic meaning. In Spanish, proper names are written with initial capital letters.
The accounting nouns point out entities that can be counted, for example five children, three rocks, thirteen euros. Accounting nouns are combined with plural quantifiers without semantically altering.
Non-accounting nouns point to realities that can not be counted except when referring to different classes or varieties, such as milk, humor, air, smoke, garbage. Countless nouns can only be combined with singular quantifiers without changing their meaning. Only cardinal numerals or plural quantifiers are allowed when they indicate a class or modality. For example: "Three glasses of milk", "Many glasses of milk", "Much milk", "Fumes emitted by acids are usually harmful", "Much air". They are classified by halves according to the personal pronoun.
Common names allow naming all people, animals or things of the same class or species, without specifying their meaning as man, horse, house. They group the objects they call by their characteristics, without expressing distinctive features. Therefore, they are considered generic nouns.Proper names identify and individualize a being to differentiate it from others of the same class. Among the proper names are the anthroponyms, which are the names and nicknames of people, such as Ramon, Carmen and Lola, and place names, which are the names of geographical places, such as Aguadulce and Almeria. They have a unique reference and lack linguistic meaning. In Spanish, proper names are written with initial capital letters.
The accounting nouns point out entities that can be counted, for example five children, three rocks, thirteen euros. Accounting nouns are combined with plural quantifiers without semantically altering.
Non-accounting nouns point to realities that can not be counted except when referring to different classes or varieties, such as milk, humor, air, smoke, garbage. Countless nouns can only be combined with singular quantifiers without changing their meaning. Only cardinal numerals or plural quantifiers are allowed when they indicate a class or modality. For example: "Three glasses of milk", "Many glasses of milk", "Much milk", "Fumes emitted by acids are usually harmful", "Much air". They are classified by halves according to the personal pronoun.
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