I got it for next to nothing in the January sales.
And what the spirit of uncomradeliness begins, finally ends with the jealousy, envy, and rivalry of lovers.
I send you back the two last sheets, because you bid me. I reserve my nibblings and minutiae for another day.
In the last few years, the traditional analysis of know as a factive verb has been lively debated by linguists and philosophers of language: several scholars have pointed out that know may be used non-factively in ordinary language. The aim of the present study is to expand this inquiry to other cognitive factive verbs than know, such as discover, realize, etc., and to investigate cross-linguistically the question of whether know and other cognitive factive verbs may occur in non-factive contexts, that is, in contexts where it is clear that the embedded proposition is false.
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