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Encyclopedia > Supine

Supine as an adjective generally refers to any upward-facing position. A body that is in supine position is lying face up, as opposed to prone, which means lying face down. When referring to a hand position, supinated means palm upwards. Palm downwards is pronated. fuck off america In grammar, a supine is a form of verbal noun used in some languages. An adjective is a part of speech which modifies a noun, usually describing it or making its meaning more specific. ... International Rifle events in Three positions are conducted with an equal number of shots fired from the Prone, the Standing and the Kneeling positions, always in that order. ... Grammar is the discovery, enunciation, and study of rules governing the use of language. ... A verbal noun is a noun formed directly as an inflexion of a verb or a verb stem, sharing at least in part its constructions. ...


A Latin supine ends in -um (former supine) or in -u (latter supine). It is used much in the same way that English infinitives are used. The sentence "I call forth the Gladiators to fight" in Latin becomes "Gladiatores voco pugnatum" (the use of the infinitive in a construction like "Gladiatores voco pugnare" is reserved for poetry). Certain idiomatic expressions also include the supine, such as mirabile dictu "wonderful to relate". The form can only be used in the accusative and ablative. Latin is an ancient Indo-European language originally spoken in the region around Rome called Latium. ... In grammar, the infinitive is the form of a verb that has no inflection to indicate person, number, mood or tense. ... The term accusative may be used in the following contexts: A form of morphosyntactic alignment, as found in nominative-accusative languages. ... In linguistics, the ablative case is a noun case found in several languages, including Latin, Sanskrit and in the Finno_Ugric languages. ...


In Slovene, a supine is used after verbs of movement, and is identical to the infinitive except in that it does not include the last letter (-i). See Slovene grammar. In grammar, the infinitive is the form of a verb that has no inflection to indicate person, number, mood or tense. ... The following is an overview of the grammar of the Slovenian language. ...


In Sanskrit the supine or verbal noun of every verb (often misnamed "infinitive", though it is not such) is formed by adding -tum to the verb stem, such as kartum "doing" from the verb karomi. It is cognate with the Latin supine. Sanskrit ( संस्कृतम्) is a classical language of India and a liturgical language of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. ...


In Swedish the supine is used with the auxiliary verb ha for some compound verb forms. See Swedish grammar. Swedish grammar is the study of the grammar of the Swedish language. ...


See also: gerund In linguistics, a gerund is a kind of verbal noun. ...


In psychological counseling, Supine has also been used to name a proposed fifth temperament, in addition to the anciently known "four humours". Psychology (ancient Greek: psyche = soul or mind, logos/-ology = study of) is an academic and applied field involving the study of mind and behavior. ... In psychological counseling, Supine is the name of a proposed fifth temperament, in addition to the four temperaments proposed in ancient medical theory. ... In psychology, temperament is the general nature of an individuals personality, such as introversion or extraversion, it derives from the theory of the humours. ... The four humours were four fluids that were thought to permeate the body and influence its health. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Supine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (299 words)
A body that is in supine position is lying face up, as opposed to prone, which means lying face down.
In Slovene, a supine is used after verbs of movement, and is identical to the infinitive except in that it does not include the last letter (-i).
In Sanskrit the supine or verbal noun of every verb (often misnamed "infinitive", though it is not such) is formed by adding -tum to the verb stem, such as kartum "doing" from the verb karomi.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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