Coordinated, Disjunctive, and Adversative Propositions in Language
Classified in Latin
Written at on English with a size of 2.4 KB.
Types of Coordinated Propositions
Coordination
Copulative: y, e, ni
Disjunctive: o, u
Distributive: one...another, bien...bien
Adversative
Restrictive/Partial: but, however, most, but nonetheless, although
Exclusive/Full: but, before bien
Explanatory
that is, what's more, for example
Pronouns and Their Values
Personal: Buy a book for Martha
Reflexive: Shaves
Reciprocal: Pedro and I look at frames
Interest: Laura, take one
Language Types and Characteristics
Administrative Language
Used in public and citizen-facing documents. Examples: analysis, curriculum, resource management, circulars.
Legal Language
Governs citizen relations. Examples: laws, proclamations, decrees, lawsuits, judgments, edicts.
Scientific Language
Communicates research results. Features explanatory and argumentative structures, precise and impersonal language, and specific adjectives.
Technical Language
Refers to scientific procedures and remedies. Uses formulas, symbols, abbreviations, acronyms, and abstract nouns.
Journalistic Language
Employs direct style, third person, varied sentence lengths, acronyms, abbreviations, cultisms, and colloquial phrases.
Language Extension and Reasoning
Italo-Latin languages influence Romanik tongues.
Why: equivalent to reason
Because: equivalent to the reason
Why (question): can be substituted with "what"
Pronoun Examples
- Me (Me): It's for me
- You (Tú): You cannot
- Him (Él): On ideslo
- Themselves (Se): They lie
- You (Te): I want one for you
- Give (Dé): I want you to give me
- More (Más): Give me more
- Even (Aún): Even and not received