proparoxytone การใช้
- A 2005 translation into archipenic proparoxytone " ( " pr韓cipe del esdr鷍ulo archip閚ico " ).
- There is none to praise it . " On the way from Latin to French, the penultimate syllable of the proparoxytone succumbed.
- According to Bertoldi and Terracini, Paleo-Sardinian has similarities with the Iberic languages and Siculian; for example, the suffix " ara " in proparoxytones indicated the plural.
- In " El movimiento V . P . ", a roman ?clef by Rafael Cansinos Ass閚s that appeared in 1921, De Torre was caricatured as " the youngest poet ", speaking in neologisms and proparoxytones.
- She longs for fish, but is unable to catch them; she looks up longingly at syllabic with proparoxytone rhythm and inconsistent ( half-) rhymes; it consistently ends on the sound "-a ".
- The influence of Lugones was evident in the book's tendency to avoid common settings, the employment of vocabulary then considered unpoetical, of unusual adjectives and unexpected metaphors, the use of word games, the frequency of proparoxytones, and the humorous use of rhyme.
- Its distinguishing features are the elongation of the sound of the vowel in the syllable preceding the stressed syllable, and of the vowel ( s ) of the stressed syllable in Proparoxytone three-syllable words The Cordob閟 also tends to elongate the sound of the last syllable in a word.
- For example, the verb " critica " " he criticizes " bears no accent mark, because it is stressed on the syllable before the last one, like most words that end in "-a ", but the noun " cr韙ica " " criticism " requires an accent mark, since it is a proparoxytone.
- A word with final stress is called oxytone ( or " " in traditional Spanish grammar texts ); a word with penultimate stress is called paroxytone ( " " or " " ); a word with antepenultimate stress ( stress on the third-to-last syllable ) is called proparoxytone ( " " ).
- A word with preantepenultimate stress ( on the fourth last syllable ) or earlier does not have a common linguistic term in English, but in Spanish receives the name " " . ( Spanish words can be stressed only on one of the last three syllables, except in the case of a verb form with enclitic pronouns, such as " " . ) All proparoxytones and " sobresdr鷍ulas " have a written accent mark.