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crasis การใช้

"crasis" แปล  
ประโยคมือถือ
  • Skulduggery explains that the only person able to create an illusion is Robert Crasis.
  • In Brazil, the grave accent serves only to indicate the crasis in written text.
  • In Portuguese, the grave accent indicates the contraction of two consecutive vowels in adjacent words ( crasis ).
  • They drive to Crasis'house, and he explains that Foe threatened his family so he was forced to disguise Mercy as Francine.
  • Similarly, synalepha most often refers to elision ( as in English contraction ), but it can also refer to coalescence by other metaplasms : synizesis, synaeresis or crasis.
  • During the Middle Ages in Europe, the Latin term " complexio " served as the translated form of the Greek word " crasis ", meaning temperament.
  • The phrase is adjectival, composed of two adjectives, ( " beautiful " ) and ( " good " or " virtuous " ), the second of which is combined by crasis with " and " to form.
  • It means that in " falamos "'we speak'there is the expected prenasal-raising :, while in " fal醡os "'we spoke'there are phonologically two in crasis :.
  • If the nominal complement is changed, after " a ", from a feminine noun to a masculine noun and it is now necessary to use'ao'( used naturally by native speakers ), crasis applies:
  • In linguistic analysis, contractions should not be confused with crasis, abbreviations nor acronyms ( including initialisms ), with which they share some semantic and phonetic functions, though all three are connoted by the term " abbreviation " in loose parlance.
  • A sign similar to a smooth breathing, called a coronis, is used to show when two words have joined together by a process called crasis ( " mixing " ), e . g . ( ) " I too ", contracted from ( ).
  • In some cases, like in the French examples below, crasis involves the grammaticalization of two individual lexical items into one, but in other cases, like in the Greek examples, crasis is the orthographic representation of the encliticization and vowel reduction of one grammatical form with another.
  • In some cases, like in the French examples below, crasis involves the grammaticalization of two individual lexical items into one, but in other cases, like in the Greek examples, crasis is the orthographic representation of the encliticization and vowel reduction of one grammatical form with another.
  • The most frequently observed crasis today is the contraction of the preposition " a " ( " to " or " at " ) with the feminine singular definite article " a " ( " the " ), indicated in writing with a grave accent or masculine singular definite article " o " ( also " the " ).
  • In strict analysis, abbreviations should not be confused with contractions, crasis, acronyms, or initialisms, with which they share some semantic and phonetic functions, though all four are connoted by the term " abbreviation " in loose parlance . An abbreviation is a shortening by any method; a contraction is a reduction of size by the drawing together of the parts.
  • In addition, the crasis " ?" is pronounced lower as than the article or preposition " a ", as, in the examples in standard European Portuguese ., but the qualitative distinction is not made by most speakers in Brazilian Portuguese ( some dialects, as Rio de Janeiro's " fluminense ", are exceptions and make the distinction ).
  • In central European Portuguese this contrast occurs in a limited morphological context, namely in verbs conjugation between the first person plural present and past perfect indicative forms of verbs such as " pensamos " ('we think') and " pens醡os " ('we thought'; spelled in Brazil ) . proposes that it is a kind of crasis rather than phonemic distinction of and.