1. advl
  2. nmod
  3. jcomp
  4. in_othr

advl

  1. Descriptions
    • adverbial
    • (Content to be added)
  2. Tag
    • advl
  3. Examples
    • You’re left as the single curator of fungi. (MICASE INT175SF003, Spoken)
    • So let’s get to it. (MICASE LAB175SU033, Spoken)
    • The semitic discourse in She, in particular, reflects the wide range of Haggard’s attitudes. (MICUSP ENG.G2.01.1, Written)
    • Webster turns the focus outwards, and looks to the material obstacles in her truly, unknown, painter’s life. (MICUSP ENG.G2.04.1, Written)

nmod

  1. Descriptions
    • noun modifying
    • (Content to be added)
  2. Tag
    • nmod
  3. Examples
    • In the colonial period those laws weren’t changed until the middle of the nineteenth century. (MICASE LEL105SU113, Spoken)
    • These are the common names for these, dicarboxylic acids. (MICASE LEL200MU110, Spoken)
    • I find the question of “nuance” a troubled one, however. (MICUSP ENG.G3.04.1, Written)
    • The new party represented a dual threat to the established order. (MICUSP HIS.G0.02.1, Written)

jcomp

  1. Descriptions
    • adjective complement
    • (Content to be added)
  2. Tag
    • jcomp
  3. Examples
    • Okay this is the first of two days we’ll be talking about augmentative and alternative communication. (MICASE LES165JG121, Spoken)
    • That would be what we’re interested in and probably a lot of you went to preschool. (MICASE LES565MX152, Spoken)
    • Brittain details her successful struggle to attain higher education, something uncommon for young women in her circle. (MICUSP HIS.G0.02.1, Written)
    • He is so popular, in fact, that the Republican Party nominates him to run for congressman. (MICUSP HIS.G0.04.1, Written)

in_othr

  1. Descriptions
    • other cases
    • (Content to be added)
  2. Tag
    • in_othr
  3. Examples
    • With a different set of primers? (MICASE MTG400MX008, Spoken)
    • That’s a nice ambiguity. (MICASE OFC355SU094, Spoken)
    • Another shared theme is that of medicine evolving into an industry. (MICUSP HIS.G0.04.1, Written)
    • Ultimately, women are portrayed more as passive objects than as active subject. (MICUSP HIS.G1.03.1, Written)