dialectally การใช้
- Grammatically, a dialectally significant feature is the number of grammatical genders.
- The question marker " al " is not used pan-dialectally.
- The retroflex fricatives and palatal fricatives represent dialectally different pronunciations of the same sound, not separate phonemes.
- Dialectally may not have the same snap, but for a word maven sticking to the straight and narrow, it's the only adverbial form on the books.
- Dialectally, there are Spanish dialects with a greater number of vowels, with some ( as Murcian and Eastern Andalusian ) reaching up to 8 to 10 vowel sounds.
- This occurred at a time when the Slavic-speaking area was already dialectally differentiated, and usually syllables with the acute and / or circumflex accent were shortened around the same time.
- Philip Sawyer of New York e-mailed to point out that I'd been swept up from the sidewalk into the realm of philosophy : What I should have written was dialectally.
- Some words became extinct while other near-synonyms of Old English origin replaced them ('limb'survives, yet " li?" is gone or survives dialectally as language evolution.
- Frederik Kortlandt ) divide the Common Slavic period into five or more stages, while others use as few as two ( an early, uniform stage and a late, dialectally differentiated stage ).
- Holbrook altered the narration to use the dialectally milder " Nigra " as the young boy wrestles with his conscience over following the law or his heart concerning " the widow's Nigra, Jim, " a runaway slave.
- Due to incompletely understood sociocultural factors, a number of sound changes occurred that uniformly affected all later dialects even well after the Slavic-speaking area had become dialectally differentiated, for at least four or five centuries after the initial Slavic dispersion.
- Dialectally, the alternation between and sometimes extends to other words, as " bladder, ladder, solder " with ( possibly being restricted elsewhere by the former two clashing with " blather " and " lather " ).
- The phrase " Park the car in Harvard Yard " & mdash; dialectally transcribed & mdash; is commonly used as a shibboleth, or speech indicator, for the non-rhotic Eastern New England dialect, which contrasts with the generally rhotic dialects elsewhere in North America.
- It is, however, unknown what symbolic meaning underlay this seal, but it is likely a reference to the local legend of the German is actually " Rehbock " and stag beetle is " Hirschk鋐er " ( or dialectally, " Reweschnier " ).
- For example, the Massina FulSe share similarities both dialectally and culturally to Nigeria / Cameroonian ( Eastern ) ( Both of which end interrogative questions with " na ? " ), as well as Senegalese / Guinean ( Western ) FulSe cultures ( who do not end interrogative questions in such mannerism ).
- During the Late Common Slavic period, from c . 800 to 1000 AD, conceptual sound changes ( e . g . the conversion of " TORT " sequences into open syllables and the development of the neoacute accent ) still occurred across the entire Slavic area, but often in dialectally differentiated ways.
- The accents of Texas are actually diverse, for example with important Spanish influences on its vocabulary; however, much of the state is still an unambiguous region of modern rhotic Southern speech, strongest in the cities of Dallas, Lubbock, Odessa, and San Antonio, Texan cities that are noticeably " non-Southern " dialectally are Abilene and Austin; only marginally Southern are Houston, El Paso, and Corpus Christi.
- This makes it inconvenient to maintain the traditional definition of a proto-language as the " latest reconstructable common ancestor " of a language group, with no dialectal differentiation . ( This would necessitate treating all pan-Slavic changes after the 6th century AD or so as part of the separate histories of the various daughter languages . ) Instead, Slavicists typically handle the entire period of dialectally-differentiated linguistic unity as "'Common Slavic " '.