Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 42British Academy - Humanities |
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Page 117
... verb , an if - clause must always be understood or supplied , if it is not actually present , in order to complete the sense of the sentence . The other view is that the meaning of ' can ' or ' could have ' can be more clearly ...
... verb , an if - clause must always be understood or supplied , if it is not actually present , in order to complete the sense of the sentence . The other view is that the meaning of ' can ' or ' could have ' can be more clearly ...
Page 119
... verb ' I can think of that might always demand a conditional clause with it is an ' auxiliary ' verb , if there is one , which is used solely to form subjunctive or conditional moods ( whatever ex- actly they may be ) of other verbs ...
... verb ' I can think of that might always demand a conditional clause with it is an ' auxiliary ' verb , if there is one , which is used solely to form subjunctive or conditional moods ( whatever ex- actly they may be ) of other verbs ...
Page 122
... verb can . When it is the main verb and is a subjunctive , it does require a conditional clause with it . Can and its parts are not used as auxiliaries of tense or mood to form tenses or moods of other verbs . Would have , whether or ...
... verb can . When it is the main verb and is a subjunctive , it does require a conditional clause with it . Can and its parts are not used as auxiliaries of tense or mood to form tenses or moods of other verbs . Would have , whether or ...
Contents
ANNUAL REPORT 19556 | 5 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir George Clark | 17 |
THE NATURE Of Recitative Aspects of Art Lecture By J A Westrup | 27 |
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54 Professor A. R. Radcliffe-Brown ancient anthropology argument Aristotle Arnold assert British Academy called Carlyle Carlyle's castle century Ceredigion Chambers Codex Sinaiticus common criticism dictation theory Domesday Domesday Book Douglas Douglas's duty early edition England English Place-Name ethics evidence example expressed fact Fascicule folk-names France friendship Greek Gwynedd Heringa if-clause interpretation Kant Keith Douglas kind Koerte later lecture letters lord lordship Maccabaean manuscripts means medieval Menander ment modern moral Museum nature Norman Nowell-Smith Old English opera Oxford panegyris passage perhaps personal names philosophers Plato poem poet poetry principles problem published quoted Radcliffe-Brown recitative reference respect Robert of Rhuddlan rules scholars scribe seems sense social Society statutes Stobaeus suggest tion tūn University verb verse visual copying Wales Welsh Welsh law Welsh March words writing καὶ τὸν