Here we have some words belonging to closed classes and appearing in all languages we have considered. Sometimes they are not really meaningful, e.g. TheyNP in French should really be replaced by masculine and feminine variants.
abstract Structural = Combinations ** { fun
Many plural determiners can take a numeral modifier. So can the plural pronouns we and you.
EveryDet, WhichDet, AllMassDet, -- every, sg which, sg all SomeDet, AnyDet, NoDet, -- sg some, any, no MostDet, MostsDet, ManyDet, MuchDet : Det ; -- sg most, pl most, many, much ThisDet, ThatDet : Det ; -- this, that AllNumDet, WhichNumDet, -- pl all, which (86) SomeNumDet, AnyNumDet, NoNumDet, -- pl some, any, no TheseNumDet, ThoseNumDet : Num -> Det ; -- these, those (86) ThisNP, ThatNP : NP ; -- this, that TheseNumNP, ThoseNumNP : Num -> NP ; -- these, those (86) INP, ThouNP, HeNP, SheNP, ItNP : NP ; -- personal pronouns in singular WeNumNP, YeNumNP : Num -> NP ; -- these pronouns can take numeral TheyNP : NP ; YouNP : NP ; -- they, the polite you EverybodyNP, SomebodyNP, NobodyNP, -- everybody, somebody, nobody EverythingNP, SomethingNP, NothingNP : NP ; -- everything, something, nothing
Depending on language, all, some, or none of there verbs belong to a separate class of auxiliary verbs. The list is incomplete.
CanVV, CanKnowVV, MustVV : VV ; -- can (pouvoir,savoir), must WantVV : VV ; -- want (to do)
WhenIAdv,WhereIAdv,WhyIAdv,HowIAdv : IAdv ; -- when, where, why, how EverywhereNP, SomewhereNP,NowhereNP : AdV ; -- everywhere, somewhere, nowhere VeryAdv, TooAdv : AdA ; -- very, too AlmostAdv, QuiteAdv : AdA ; -- almost, quite OtherwiseAdv, ThereforeAdv : AdS ; -- therefore, otherwise
AndConj, OrConj : Conj ; -- and, or BothAnd, EitherOr, NeitherNor : ConjD ; -- both-and, either-or, neither-nor IfSubj, WhenSubj, AlthoughSubj : Subj ; -- if, when, although
We have chosen a set of semantic relations expressible by prepositions in some languages, by cases or postpositions in others. Complement uses of prepositions are not included, and should be treated by the use of many-place verbs, adjectives, and functions.
InPrep, OnPrep, ToPrep, FromPrep, -- spatial relations ThroughPrep, AbovePrep, UnderPrep, InFrontPrep, BehindPrep, BetweenPrep : Prep ; BeforePrep, DuringPrep, AfterPrep : Prep ; -- temporal relations WithPrep, WithoutPrep, ByMeansPrep : Prep ; -- some other relations PossessPrep : Prep ; -- possessive/genitive PartPrep : Prep ; -- partitive "of" ("bottle of wine") AgentPrep : Prep ; -- agent "by" in passive constructions
The negative-positive (French si, German doch) is missing.
PhrYes, PhrNo : Phr ; -- yes, no }