• Title/Summary/Keyword: passives

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Korean Learners' Development of English Passive Constructions

  • Park, Hye-Sook
    • English Language & Literature Teaching
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    • v.15 no.4
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    • pp.199-216
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    • 2009
  • This study investigates how Korean speakers develop their interlanguage of English passive constructions with a reference to the learners' grammar proficiency levels. Sixty two college students of different levels of English participated in this study. They were asked to complete a sentence-completion task. Their production was classified into accurate passives, malformed passives, pseudo-passives, unaccusatives, and actives according to the use of transitive, ergative and unergative verbs. They then were further analyzed depending on the subjects' levels of grammar by three main factors: L1 transfer, the English voice system, and universal cognitive factors. The results showed that the subjects of the lower group produced more pseudo-passives, malformed passives, and overpassivization than those of the higher group, and even subjects of higher group still made passives for ergative verbs. It was also shown that L1 and universal factors had more influence on the lower group than on the higher group. Based on the analyses of the subjects' responses, the development of the English passive system by Korean learners is shown and some implications are suggested for effective teaching of English.

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Translating English By-Phrase Passives into Korean: A Parallel Corpus Analysis (영한 병렬 코퍼스에 나타난 영어 수동문의 한국어 번역)

  • Lee, Seung-Ah
    • Journal of English Language & Literature
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    • v.56 no.5
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    • pp.871-905
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    • 2010
  • This paper is motivated by Watanabe's (2001) observation that English byphrase passives are sometimes translated into Japanese object topicalization constructions. That is, the original English sentence in the passive may be translated into the active voice with the logical object topicalized. A number of scholars, including Chomsky (1981) and Baker (1992), have remarked that languages have various ways to avoid focusing on the logical subject. The aim of the present study is to examine the translation equivalents of the English by-phrase passives in an English-Korean parallel corpus compiled by the author. A small sample of articles from Newsweek magazine and its published Korean translation reveals that there are indeed many ways to translate English by-phrase passives, including object topicalization (12.5%). Among the 64 translated sentences analyzed and classified, 12 (18.8%) examples were problematic in terms of agent defocusing, which is the primary function of passives. Of these 12 instances, five cases were identified where an alternative translation would be more suitable. The results suggest that the functional characteristics of English by-phrase passives should be highlighted in translator training as well as language teaching.

Solenoid Type 3-D Passives(Inductors and Trans-formers) For Advanced Mobile Telecommunication Systems

  • Park, Jae Y.;Jong U. Bu
    • JSTS:Journal of Semiconductor Technology and Science
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    • v.2 no.4
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    • pp.295-301
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    • 2002
  • In this paper, solenoid-type 3-D passives (inductors and transformers) have been designed, fabricated, and characterized by using electroplating techniques, wire bonding techniques, multi-layer thick photoresist, and low temperature processes which are compatible with semiconductor circuitry fabrication. Two different fabrication approaches are performed to develop the solenoid-type 3-D passives and relationship of performance characteristics and geometry is also deeply investigated such as windings, cross-sectional area of core, spacing between windings, and turn ratio. Fully integrated inductor has a quality factor of 31 at 6 GHz, an inductance of 2.7 nH, and a self resonant frequency of 15.8 GHz. Bonded wire inductor has a quality factor of 120, an inductance of 20 nH, and a self resonant frequency of 8 GHz. Integrated transformers with turn ratios of 1:1 and n:l have the minimum insertion loss of about 0.6 dB and the wide bandwidth of a few GHz.

Korean '-e ci' Constructions: Anti-Causatives or Passives?

  • Song, Jina
    • Language and Information
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    • v.20 no.1
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    • pp.51-71
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    • 2016
  • The status of the Korean morphological marker '-e ci' has been controversial whether it is a passive marker, an anticausative marker, or a passive/anticausative marker. However, the previous approaches that tried to classify '-e ci' constructions based on the syntactic verb classes (i.e. intransitive or transitive) were short of explaining the properties of the constructions. In this study, the '-e ci' constructions were distinguished based on agentivity, following Levin & Rappaport Hovav (1995) and Alexiadou et al. (2006). Moreover, how the verbal root meaning is associated with the passive/anticausative construction was investigated by means of Distributed Morphology (DM) (Embick 2010; Marantz 1997). I argued that the morphological marker '-e ci' is the instantiation of the absence of external arguments. With respect to the behavior of the Korean '-e ci' constructions with the semantics of each verbal root class, I found out that the '-e ci' constructions can form passives with the verbal roots that require the external arguments; whereas, the anticausatives cannot be formed with the roots that necessarily require the agentive arguments. However, contrary to the previous arguments that '-e ci' passives can be only formed with transitive verbs, it is discovered that non-agentive transitive roots do form anticausatives. Moreover, I argued that there are two types of the anticausatives - zero and '-e ci' anticausatives. Since the valency reduction is marked by the non-active voice morphology, the zero anticausatives appear only with the roots that do not require external arguments. The different '-e ci' constructions (passives, '-e ci', and zero anticausatives) are represented by the distinct syntactic structures. I proposed that the morphological similarity between the passives and the '-e ci' anticausatives is due to the presence of VoiceP, which introduces the external arguments. Moreover, the lack of the voice morphology in the zero anticausatives is explained by the absence of the VoiceP.

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Embedded Passives (내장형 수동소자)

  • 이호영
    • Journal of the Microelectronics and Packaging Society
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    • v.9 no.2
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    • pp.55-60
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    • 2002
  • The recent trend in electronic devices has been towards light weight, low cost, high performance and improved reliability. Passive components are very important parts of microelectronic devices. The number of passive components used in hand held devices and computers continue to increase. To achieve improvements in costs, component density, performance, and reliability, embedding of these passive components into the printed circuit boards (PCBs) is required. This paper introduces the embedding of passive components, and discusses the remained challenges in the commercialization of this technique.

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The Tuning of Oscillation Frequency by the Analysis of Characteristics of each Block in Ceramic VCO (세라믹 VCO의 Block 특성 분석을 통한 주파수 튜닝)

  • Yoo Chan-Sei;Lee Woo-Sung
    • Journal of the Microelectronics and Packaging Society
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    • v.11 no.2 s.31
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    • pp.49-52
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    • 2004
  • Ceramic components and modules using LTCC passives are being performed and on the passives included in modules have been studied nowadays. However the characteristics changes of passives in ceramic module due to the coupling between patterns, so each block in module, must be analyzed in the state of module including coupling factors. In our research, characteristics of each block of VCO, resonator part, oscillator part, output part were measured and analyzed to allow the prediction of behavior of VCO.

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The Effect of Conflict-Coping Types on Marital Satisfaction (부부의 갈등대처유형이 결혼만족도에 미치는 영향)

  • 지금수
    • Journal of Families and Better Life
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    • v.13 no.4
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    • pp.71-84
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    • 1995
  • This study discusses whether conflict-coping types of marital couples affect marital satisfaction. There are 5 conflict-coping types of husbands and wives which can be distinguished from each other by attitudes based on partners' answers. Women's conflict-coping types are : compromisors passives apathetics attackers and blamers. Men's conflict-coping types are : reasoners passives jubeniles attackers and volatiles. Each type of husband and wife affects their marital satisfaction. All married coulpes are categorized again by the index of withdraw/demand. As result there is a difference among 3 groups : resoner-husbadn/ any type of wife demand-husband/ withdraw-wife and demand-husband/ demand-wife. In other words when a husband is resoner-husband regardless of the type of wife their marital satisfaction is the highest. And the demand-husband / withdraw-wife type shows a more positive effect on marital satisfaction than the demand-husband/ demand-wife type.

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Dielectric Materials for Embedded Capacitors (내장형 축전기용 유전재료)

  • 이호영
    • Journal of the Microelectronics and Packaging Society
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    • v.9 no.2
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    • pp.61-67
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    • 2002
  • The number of passive components used in hand held devices and computers continue to increase so that the passive to active ratio continues to grow. Embedded passives are the best technology for very high component density with increased electrical performance. improved reliability, reduced size, weight and lower cost. Specially embedded capacitors are strongly under development. This paper discusses dielectric materials used in embedded capacitors and remained challenges.

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