Topic
Valency
About: Valency is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1632 publications have been published within this topic receiving 26141 citations.
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TL;DR: It is claimed that noun-incorporation in English manifests itself in verbs formed by compression and backformation, such as to baby-sit, to head-hunt, to whistle-blow, and denominal verb formed by transmutation, for example to doctor, to nest, to knife.
2 citations
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TL;DR: Fang et al. as discussed by the authors classified 2-arc-transitive hexavalent Cayley graphs on nonabelian simple groups and proved that these graphs are either normal or -arctransitive.
Abstract: Abstract A plenty of contributions have been done on symmetric Cayley graphs on nonabelian simple groups, but the only known complete classification of such graphs with composite valency is of valency 4 (provided 2-arc-transitivity) by Fang et al. [Europ. J. Combin. 25 (2004), 1107–1116] and Du and Feng [Comm. Algebra 47 (2019), 4565–4574]. This naturally motivates this work for classifying 2-arc-transitive hexavalent Cayley graphs on nonabelian simple groups. It is proved that these graphs are either normal or -arc-transitive Cayley graphs on where n is among 11 specific numbers dividing A specific example is also constructed.
2 citations
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TL;DR: The article comes to the conclusion that valency of verbs, i.e., its ability of forming combinations with other words is the ground for the successful act of communication.
Abstract: The article explores text forming potentials of verbs, considered on the materials of the English, Russian and Azerbaijani languages. Verb differs from other parts of speech as to the many numbers of categories, as to the richness of lexico-semantic, morphological-syntactical, phraseological and phonetical peculiarities. Verbs play a special role in forming combinations with other words in the sentence and in the text, during the consideration of which their valency is investigated as well. Analyzing the examples taken from the literary fictions on the materials of the three languages, we specify certain types of texts in which verbs govern all the types of utterances being the main, organizing elements of sentences. In the article we come to the conclusion that valency of verbs, i.e., its ability of forming combinations with other words is the ground for the successful act of communication.
1 citations