Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
It can be seen as a middle voice which is both active and passive at the same time.
Some verbs survive only in their middle voice form, the other forms having been lost over time.
Not all sentences using the middle voice are necessarily weasel words.
From a Watchtower (1976), five songs for high or middle voice and piano.
Among those other uses is the use of middle voice as an approximation to causative.
The middle voice is generally used in the following situations to express:
Greek had a middle voice as well as the active and passive.
She had one of those middle voices and middle accents that seemed just about average for American women.
Also, there is the reflexive which combines middle voice and mediopassive.
It is primarily used as the middle voice of drum and bugle corps.
Both passive voice and middle voice can be used in English to avoid blame.
"The melody sings on top, middle voices are activated, and they have lots of space in between."
However it did not supplant the French horn, which remained the dominant middle voice.
Icelandic possesses the middle voice in addition to both the active and passive.
Part II forms the future tense in the active and middle voices.
45 - 1940, for middle voice and small orchestra
A counter melody appears at measure 42 in the middle voice, intensifying the passage.
However, the cello mostly plays a middle voice.
The key difference was in the audio itself, specifically in the middle voicing.
There is a break in the middle voice, so that the voice does not all work together; an unevenness."
Here are examples of sub-categories of the middle voice.
In this tense the verb is same with the verb of the middle voice.
Since this is predominantly used in generalized speech, semantics diverge from middle voice.
A slight huskiness in the middle voice is still evident in some of her recordings.
Most often the middle voice is used in this context when there is no direct reference to any grammatical person.