God bless you, Evan Ashworth, I like your videos. I'm an MA student of Linguistics who have never had an impressive teacher like you. I understand all what I couldn't in my classroom. Waiting for your release on Deep and Surface Structures, Semantics, IPA, etc. all as other complex and perhaps difficult aspects of Linguistics. I'm now an online student of yours and you my online professor.
Oy, that's another can of worms! Codemixing is often used as a synonym for codeswitching, but I feel that "codemixing" is often used by lay audiences to represent, for example, simple borrowing or switching between registers.
Hi, Evan. I'm from Mozambique, and i'm writing my monograph about "Codeswitching" Can you help me? I'm majoring in English Teaching as Foreign Language.
A clitic is form that is morphologically distinct but phonologically dependent on another form (and are therefore typically unstressed). On the surface, clitics appear the same as affixes, but I think of clitics as words (which therefore have more of a syntactic role) masquerading as affixes. For example, the "-n't" as in "doesn't" isn't simply an affix; the standalone morpheme (word) "not" has been phonologically reduced and globbed on to the end of "does". Same thing can be said about the "-'m" as in "I'm" in English. "Lo" in Spanish (e.g., Quiero comero - "I want to eat it") behaves in a similar way (clitics don't have to appear at the end though, as enclitics, they can appear elsewhere [e.g., at the beginning of the form they attach to as an enclitic). I hope that helps!
It's really a happy moment for me and for all of us to see you back here. Hopefully you won't take such huge breaks again.
I am so happy to see your videos back on TH-cam. Your content help me a lot at university. Thank you ❤
Nice to hear from you again!
God bless you, Evan Ashworth,
I like your videos. I'm an MA student of Linguistics who have never had an impressive teacher like you. I understand all what I couldn't in my classroom.
Waiting for your release on Deep and Surface Structures, Semantics, IPA, etc. all as other complex and perhaps difficult aspects of Linguistics.
I'm now an online student of yours and you my online professor.
I love the example situations so much. They make me laugh even when I’m frustrated from studying so much 😂
Great to have a new upload from you
please keep the hard work your videos are important and helpful your friend from Libya
Thank you, happy to see you again.
Evans, you're the best 🙏🏼
Love it! thank you! this helps me so much as a SLPA
Love your videos ❤ makes learning fun and easier to comprehend 🇬🇾
Please upload more videos,
1:03 I learned from the semantics lecture that a cat is hyponym of a vomit maker , makes perfect sense
Very interesting. Thank you!
Super padre tu video, muchas gracias.
Could you please make a video on the distinction between code mixing and code switching?
Oy, that's another can of worms! Codemixing is often used as a synonym for codeswitching, but I feel that "codemixing" is often used by lay audiences to represent, for example, simple borrowing or switching between registers.
This is great info! Do you have a podcast?
Thank you for watching! I do not have a podcast...yet
welcome back
it was super useful TYSM!
Can you please do a video explaining homophones?
What are the classification of morphemes on the basis of *position of attachment to root* and *placement with root*
My sister and I intra-sentential codeswitching between Romanian, English, and Russian is a lot of fun for those within earshot hahahaha
Hi Evan, saw you at the workshop today😂
Haha! Thanks so much for watching!
Hi, Evan. I'm from Mozambique, and i'm writing my monograph about "Codeswitching" Can you help me?
I'm majoring in English Teaching as Foreign Language.
What are clitics?
A clitic is form that is morphologically distinct but phonologically dependent on another form (and are therefore typically unstressed). On the surface, clitics appear the same as affixes, but I think of clitics as words (which therefore have more of a syntactic role) masquerading as affixes. For example, the "-n't" as in "doesn't" isn't simply an affix; the standalone morpheme (word) "not" has been phonologically reduced and globbed on to the end of "does". Same thing can be said about the "-'m" as in "I'm" in English. "Lo" in Spanish (e.g., Quiero comero - "I want to eat it") behaves in a similar way (clitics don't have to appear at the end though, as enclitics, they can appear elsewhere [e.g., at the beginning of the form they attach to as an enclitic). I hope that helps!
I wish you were in our university🥲🤍
Can you make these videos: pls
(I have exam on Dec 30 2024)
◾Grammar
◾Syntax
◾Semantics
Tnank you in advance❤