. _:b6453055 "A Pronoun is a Noun implying a Person, but not admitting the Sign a or the before it."@en . _:b6453055 "1753, Charles Davies, Busby's English Introduction to the Latin Tongue Examined, page 11:"@en . _:b6453056 "And some linguistic signs, like \u201Cthe\u201D, \u201Cand\u201D or \u201Cwith\u201D, may lack apparent objects, though they are clearly meaningful and interpretable."@en . _:b6453056 . _:b6453054 . _:b6453053 . _:b6453056 "2008, Eero Tarasti, Robert S. Hatten, A Sounding of Signs: Modalities and Moments in Music, Culture, and Philosophy : Essays in Honor of Eero Tarasti on His 60th Anniversary:"@en . _:b6453055 . _:b6453054 "A Noun substantive and a Noun adjective may be thus distinguished, that a substantive may have the sign a or the before it; as, puer, a boy, the boy; but an adjective cannot, as, bonus, good."@en . _:b6453053 "A semantic unit, something that conveys meaning or information (e.g. a word of written language); (linguistics, semiotics) a unit consisting of a signifier and a signified concept. (See sign (semiotics).)"@en . "10" . _:b6453054 "1692, Thomas Bennet, Short Introduction of Grammar ... of the Latine Tongue:"@en .