Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/1a4bf9595c8e0813167722675db7d766f522c82938670d7e8e7b69a075c4bec0> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 5 of
5
with 100 triples per page.
- 1a4bf9595c8e0813167722675db7d766f522c82938670d7e8e7b69a075c4bec0 first "Faisal".
- 1a4bf9595c8e0813167722675db7d766f522c82938670d7e8e7b69a075c4bec0 isCitedBy Catenative_verb.
- 1a4bf9595c8e0813167722675db7d766f522c82938670d7e8e7b69a075c4bec0 last "Mustafa".
- 1a4bf9595c8e0813167722675db7d766f522c82938670d7e8e7b69a075c4bec0 quote "In the English language, catenative verbs are verbs which can be followed within the same clause by another verb in either the to-infinitive or present participle / gerund forms. An example appears in the sentence He deserves to win the cup, where "deserve" is a catenative verb which can be followed directly by another verb, in this case a to-infinitive construction.".
- 1a4bf9595c8e0813167722675db7d766f522c82938670d7e8e7b69a075c4bec0 title "Knowledge is Power".