The following interlinear glossed text data was extracted from a document found on the
World Wide Web via a semi-automated process. The data presented here could contain
corruption (degraded or missing characters), so the source document (link below) should
be consulted to ensure accuracy.
If you use any of the data shown here for research purposes,
be sure to cite ODIN and the source document. Please use the following citation record or variant thereof:
Griffin, William Earl (Ed.) (2003). The Role of Agreement in Natural Language: Proceedings of the Fifth Annual Texas Linguistics Society.
URL: http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~tls/2001tls/TLS5.pdf
(Last accessed 2005-05-31).
ODIN: http://odin.linguistlist.org/igt_raw.php?id= 1197&langcode=gsg (2021-08-10).
Example #1:
(1) a. HANSi MARIEji FRAGEN j
Hans Marie ask
`Hans asks Marie.'
Example #2:
b. HANSi MARIEji LEHREN j
Hans Marie teach
`Hans teaches Marie.'
Example #3:
(2) a. HANSi MARIEji VERSPOTTEN j
Hans Marie annoy
`Hans annoys Marie.'
Example #4:
b. * HANSi MARIEj VERSPOTTEN
Hans Marie annoy
`Hans annoys Marie.'
Example #5:
(3) a. * HANSi MARIE MAG
Hans Marie like
`Hans likes Marie.'
Example #6:
(4) SOHNj [MUTTERi 5-JAHRE iLEHRENj]
son mother 5 years teach
ok `A mother has been teaching her son for 5 years' (episodic reading)
Example #7:
(5) SOHNj [MUTTERi 5-JAHRE iPAMj iLEHRENj]
son mother 5 years PAM teach
ok `A mother has been teaching her son for 5 years' (episodic reading)
Example #8:
(6) SOHNj [MUTTERi 5-JAHRE iPAMj iLEHRENj] FERTIG
son mother 5 years PAM teach finish
ok `A mother has been teaching her son for 5 years' (successive episodic reading
Example #9:
(9) MARIEi HANSj [ IXi IXj KENNEN ]
Marie Hans she him know
`Marie knows Hans.'
Example #10:
(10) MARIEi HANSj [iPAMj KENNEN ]
Marie Hans PAM know
`Marie knows Hans at a particular moment.'