Agrammatic aphasia is a neurogenic language disorder most notably characterised by simplified sentence structure and marked difficulties in producing complex verb inflections. Patients with this ...
LAST week, I explained why the nominative and subjective cases are lumped as just a single case in modern English, thenpointed out that nouns don’t inflect or change form at all in these two cases and ...
The reason is verbs in the singular third-person subjunctive ignore the subject-verb agreement rule. They drop the "-s" or "-es" at their tail ends and take the base form of the verb (the verb's ...