comparative analysis of pronouns in english and uzbek languages

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comparative analysis of pronouns in english and uzbek languages a. sabina annotation this comparative analysis examines pronoun systems in english and uzbek, focusing on grammatical differences in person, number, gender, and case marking key words. pronouns, english, uzbek, comparative analysis, grammar, linguistic, morphology, case system, personal pronouns, possessive pronouns, demonstrative pronouns: contrasting features english demonstrative pronouns (this, that, these, those) exhibit proximity (near/far speaker) contrast lacking in uzbek’s shu (this/that, singular/plural), u (that, distant), demonstrating a simpler system with number and distance distinctions impacting grammatical choices significantly differing from english’s four-pronoun system. both languages utilize demonstrative pronouns for anaphora and cataphora, though their morphological complexities differ. english’s declension (e.g., 'this' vs relative pronouns: structural differences comparative analysis reveals significant structural differences in english and uzbek relative clauses uzbek relative pronouns (kim, qaysi, kining) lack the number and gender distinctions present in many other languages (e.g., german, russian) and unlike english, …
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morphological variations reflecting case, number, and gender agreement. for instance, english lacks specific reciprocal pronouns for different numbers, using “each other” and “one another” broadly reflexive and intensive pronouns: a comparison comparative analysis reveals english reflexive pronouns' grammatical integration (e.g intensive pronouns (myself, yourself, etc indefinite pronouns: semantic divergences english indefinite pronouns (e.g., someone, anyone, everybody) exhibit semantic divergences from uzbek counterparts (kimdir, kimdir emas, har kim) regarding inclusivity/exclusivity, specificity, and number agreement, impacting translation comparative analysis of 15 english indefinite pronouns (some, any, no, every, etc.) with their uzbek equivalents (biror, har qanday, hech qanday, har bir, etc.) across various syntactic contexts (e.g., noun phrases, subject positions in sentences like "someone is here" vs quantitative analysis of 500 sentences from english and uzbek corpora reveals frequency distribution discrepancies in the use of indefinite pronouns. statistical differences in usage across different registers (formal vs possessive pronouns: a comparative study this …
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s case systems and pronoun inflection english pronoun inflection primarily marks person (1st, 2nd, 3rd), number (singular/plural), and gender (masculine/feminine in 3rd person singular), exemplified by "he," "she," "they." uzbek pronouns, however, are inflected for case, number (singular/plural), and person (1st, 2nd, 3rd) english employs a relatively simple nominative-accusative case system for pronouns (i/me, he/him), contrasting with uzbek's more complex system involving six cases (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, locative, ablative) impacting pronoun forms like "men" (i), "mening" (my), "menga" (to me), etc comparative analysis reveals english's reliance on word order to signify grammatical function, whereas uzbek extensively utilizes case markers on pronouns. this leads to different sentence structures interrogative pronouns: cross-linguistic analysis cross-linguistic analysis shows varying degrees of pronoun specification; english relying more on context, while uzbek's inflection provides explicit grammatical information, affecting translation between languages and impacting linguistic theories concerning pronoun evolution across indo-european and turkic language families. english …
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e indefinite pronouns, showcasing lexical diversity. regional variations in both languages (e.g., american vs personal pronouns: english vs. uzbek both languages utilize reflexive pronouns (english: myself; uzbek: o'zim), but the uzbek system exhibits more morphological consistency. english shows pronoun case distinctions (nominative vs. accusative; subjective vs uzbek distinguishes singular, plural, and formal/informal 'you' (sen, siz), absent in standard english conclusion this comparative analysis reveals significant structural and functional differences in pronoun systems between english and uzbek references 1. comrie, b. (1989). language universals and linguistic typology. university of chicago press. (focuses on typological comparisons relevant to pronoun systems) 2. dryer, m. s. (2013). the world atlas of language structures online
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comparative analysis of pronouns in english and uzbek languages a. sabina annotation this comparative analysis examines pronoun systems in english and uzbek, focusing on grammatical differences in person, number, gender, and case marking key words. pronouns, english, uzbek, comparative analysis, grammar, linguistic, morphology, case system, personal pronouns, possessive pronouns, demonstrative pronouns: contrasting features english demonstrative pronouns (this, that, these, those) exhibit proximity (near/far speaker) contrast lacking in uzbek’s shu (this/that, singular/plural), u (that, distant), demonstrating a simpler system with number and distance distinctions impacting grammatical choices significantly differing from english’s four-pronoun system. both languages utilize demonstrative ...

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