Word order | Syntactic transformation

Negative inversion

In linguistics, negative inversion is one of many types of subject–auxiliary inversion in English. A negation (e.g. not, no, never, nothing, etc.) or a word that implies negation (only, hardly, scarcely) or a phrase containing one of these words precedes the finite auxiliary verb necessitating that the subject and finite verb undergo inversion. Negative inversion is a phenomenon of English syntax. Other Germanic languages have a more general V2 word order, which allows inversion to occur much more often than in English, so they may not acknowledge negative inversion as a specific phenomenon. While negative inversion is a common occurrence in English, a solid understanding of just what elicits the inversion has not yet been established. It is, namely, not entirely clear why certain fronted expressions containing a negation elicit negative inversion, but others do not. As with subject-auxiliary inversion in general, negative inversion results in a discontinuity and so is a problem for theories of syntax. The problem exists both for the relatively layered structures of phrase structure grammars as well as for the flatter structures of dependency grammars. (Wikipedia).

Negative inversion
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Ex: Simplifying the Opposites of Negatives Integers

This video provides several examples of simplifying opposites of negative integers. Search Complete Video Library at http://www.mathispower4u.wordpress.com

From playlist Introduction to Integers

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From playlist Basic Math

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Proving a Negative Times a Negative Is a Positive with the Distributive Property

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Negative Exponents

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From playlist Polynomial Operations

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From playlist Algebra - Worked Examples

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From playlist To The Point Math (TTP Videos)

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Applying the reciprocal rule with negative exponents to simplify an expression

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From playlist Simplify Using the Rules of Exponents

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From playlist Simplify Using the Rules of Exponents

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how to simplify an expression raised to a negative power

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From playlist Simplify Using the Rules of Exponents

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From playlist Precalculus - College Algebra/Trigonometry

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An Indepth Look at Using Inverse Trig Functions (Precalculus - Trigonometry 21)

A very detailed explanation of Inverse Trigonometric Functions and how to use them in conjunction with Basic Trig Functions. Pretty much all you need to know about using inverse trig functions. Support: https://www.patreon.com/ProfessorLeonard

From playlist Precalculus - College Algebra/Trigonometry

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How to Find Inverse Trigonometric Functions (Precalculus - Trigonometry 19)

A step by step approach to find inverse trig functions along with their domain and range. Support: https://www.patreon.com/ProfessorLeonard

From playlist Precalculus - College Algebra/Trigonometry

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From playlist Matrices, Vectors, & 3D Math: Lecture Videos

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From playlist Precalculus - College Algebra/Trigonometry

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From playlist Precalculus - College Algebra/Trigonometry

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What are Negative Exponents? | Don't Memorise

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From playlist Middle School Algebra (Part 1)

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The Inverse of an Odd Function is Always Odd.

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Related pages

Catena (linguistics) | Syntactic movement | Inversion (linguistics) | Do-support | Phrase structure grammar | Government (linguistics) | Dependency grammar | V2 word order | Discontinuity (linguistics) | Subject–auxiliary inversion