scholarly journals Morphological Analytical Construction with the Verb Get in Modern English

Author(s):  
Natal’ya Vladimirovna Shershukova ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 424-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Tasaki ◽  
Thomas Gilbert ◽  
J. R. Dorfman

2018 ◽  
Vol 226 ◽  
pp. 02012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viktor P. Lapshin ◽  
Ilya A. Turkin ◽  
Alexey A. Zakalyuzhnyy ◽  
Viktor F. Khlystunov ◽  
Gennadiy A. Kuzin

A special case of synthesizing the electromechanical control system by the maximum method and using the Analytical Construction method of Aggregate Regulators (ACAR) is considered in the article. For the basis the task of synthesizing the optimal for speed electromechanical positioning system was chosen, while the moment of resistance to movement linearly depended on the output coordinate of the system, that is, on the angle of the engine rotor rotation. Synthesis of the optimal system for speed makes it possible to increase the efficiency of the entire production process in many production tasks, and the synthesis of the optimal linear control system based on the maximum principle is a fairly well-formalized problem. Here it should be noted that the procedure for synergistic synthesis of the optimal control system has no such formalization. An approach that brings together the solutions obtained by these two methods, which makes it possible to increase the efficiency of the ACAR method by adding some features of the methodology for synthesizing optimal systems by introducing nonlinearity of the “saturation” type is proposed in the article. The results obtained made it possible to formulate the following basic scientific proposition: the synthesis of a control system based on the synergetic approach makes it possible to obtain a system close to optimal (quasi-optimal, but after the modification of the synergetic synthesis method itself.) Here we also formulate the hypothesis of a connection between the time constants, using the ACAR method, with the optimal control switching time determined in the maximum method.


2018 ◽  
Vol 230 ◽  
pp. 02032 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mykola Surianinov ◽  
Yurii Krutii

The solution of the problem of the long cylindrical shell bending by a numerical and analytical boundary elements method is considered. The method is based on the analytical construction of a fundamental system of solutions and Green’s functions for the differential equation of the problem under consideration. This paper is devoted to the determination of these expressions. The semi-moment theory of the cylindrical shell calculation, proposed by V.Z. Vlasov, which for the problem under consideration leads to one eighth-order partial differential equation is used. The problem of the bending of a cylindrical shell is twodimensional, and in the numerical and analytical boundary elements method, plates and shells are considered as generalized one-dimensional modules, so the variational method of Kantorovich-Vlasov was applied to this equation to obtain an ordinary differential equation of the eighth order. Sixty-four expressions of all the fundamental functions of the problem are constructed, as well as an analytic expression for the Green’s function, which makes it possible to construct a load vector (without any restrictions on the nature of its application), and then proceed to the solution of boundary-value problems for the bending of long cylindrical shells under various boundary conditions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 82 (3) ◽  
pp. 395-403
Author(s):  
Ilya Arkhipov ◽  
Sergey Loesov

AbstractThe paper shows that there is a pattern in the distribution of synthetic (šēp šarrim “the king's foot”) vs. analytical (kaspum ša awīlim “the boss's money”) genitive constructions in Old Babylonian. The choice depends on the lexical feature of head nouns known as (in)alienability. Old Babylonian kinship and body part terms, as well as some other substantives, are “inalienable”, which means they take only the synthetic construction. All other Old Babylonian nouns are “alienable”, which means they admit both the synthetic and the analytical construction (kasap tamkārī and kaspum ša tamkārī “the merchants’ money”). In the latter case, there is no general rule to predict the choice, yet in certain cases the two constructions display a non-random frequency distribution.


1906 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-225
Author(s):  
T. E. Hayward

The “graphic” method of constructing a Life-Table which is ably and lucidly expounded in the paper by Drs Newsholme and Stevenson (published in the Journal of Hygiene, vol. III. No. 3, pp. 297—324), is one way of dividing up foundation figures of population and deaths, given in groups of ages, into numbers belonging to each separate year of age, so that, either directly by the fraction , or indirectly by first obtaining , and then finding the value of , the series of px values is obtained forming the connecting link between the data and the results of the Life-Table.


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