Many of the names, transliterated phonetically from Arabic, are not well-known or are difficult to identify from the information given. |
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Clawing through those initial pages with their illegible scrawl and phonetically terrestrial sounds required the tenacity of a saint. |
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For some bloggers, a nom de plume might be used when the blogger's real name is phonetically unwieldy or so common as to be undistinguishable. |
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Speech can be transcribed phonetically at different levels of detail and accuracy. |
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His content is in Farsi, Farsi written phonetically with English characters and plain English. |
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On a computer, they usually are written by typing words phonetically in Roman letters, then using special software to convert them to characters. |
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The uncredited Japanese actress who plays Noriko clearly doesn't speak fluent English, and seems to be delivering her lines phonetically. |
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Either way, guttural and gutter have been phonetically and semantically conflated. |
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I phonetically learn lyrics of Hindi songs and I am an avid admirer of Shahrukh Khan's eyebrows. |
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Those orthographies made it possible to write Chinese phonetically and to write spoken Japanese terms that had no equivalent Chinese characters. |
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Each letter has a particular sound so reading is relatively simple, words being pronounced phonetically. |
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The applicant claims that the trade marks in question are not phonetically and conceptually similar. |
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Another tradition, shared throughout Scotland, seems to be names that are impossible to sound out phonetically. |
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Kanji are a system of Japanese writing using Chinese characters to phonetically represent names. |
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Do I choose a literally translated or a phonetically transliterated name for my mark? |
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A penniless Cuban immigrant, he asked a friend to write them out phonetically on a piece of paper so he could memorise them. |
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Place names are often only available phonetically, and spelling varies depending on the transcription from the original language. |
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She learned the lyrics phonetically, and we performed it at our next event. |
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So although spelling English more phonetically might make it easier to read, it might also make it harder to understand. |
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In Africa the singers would often sing the Spanish lyrics phonetically without actually understanding them. |
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The paper includes a story of a businessman who translated the first paragraph of a speech into Chinese and read it phonetically. |
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Impossible to transcribe phonetically, but it was a revelatory tongue twister. |
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The vocal trio Lambert, Hendricks, and Ross also phonetically imitated horn solos. |
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The speech stimuli were eight phonetically balanced monosyllabic word lists, uttered by a male and a female speakers. |
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Many names were written phonetically, as they sounded to the person recording them. |
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For Togo Igawa, it wasn't easy because he learnt everything phonetically and we couldn't improvise. |
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Try entering the word phonetically, or adding dashes or spaces to break the word into sections. |
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I wrote out the words for him phonetically and he got it right in a single recording. |
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There is more to phonics than merely learning to spell words phonetically. |
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Instead, the list of names with front vowels surely differed from the list of names with back vowels in many other ways, phonetically and otherwise. |
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Your trademark could be infringing on trademarks which are identical or phonetically or visually similar. |
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Tools consisting of statement cards with common greetings written phonetically in both official languages have been distributed. |
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I put in a lot of work and I picked things up pretty quickly working phonetically. |
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For example, they differ in the extent to which they require allophones to be phonetically similar. |
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Gilbert Hubbard came to Parliament using the stenograph machine, reading his phonetically typed notes to his amanuensis who typed on an electric typewriter. |
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A person will listen to the place-name spoken and then phonetically render the place-name in his or her own language, creating at best a close approximation. |
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All of the disguised forms were two syllables, and resembled English words phonetically and orthographically. |
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Allophone, one of the phonetically distinct variants of a phoneme. |
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The sentences were already phonetically labelled, so the researchers could compare those labels to the activity recorded at each electrode as the patients heard the sounds. |
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In Karaim, Gagauz, and Uzbek dialects and others, Slavic or Iranian influence has caused harmony to be phonetically differently realized, though harmony is far from lost. |
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It can be written phonetically in any characters. |
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Case of mistaken identity due to phonetically oriented computer. |
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Call signs should also be spelled phonetically. |
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Aeronautical call signs should always be pronounced phonetically. |
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This often manifests itself phonetically by a greater degree of constriction, though the phonetic distinction is not always clear. |
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Indians' tendency to pronounce English phonetically as well can cause divergence from Western English. |
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However, they are so dissimilar phonetically that they are considered separate phonemes. |
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In this way, the terms fortis and lenis are convenient in discussing English phonology, even if they are phonetically imprecise. |
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Only prepositions do this in Czech, and they normally link phonetically to the following noun, so do not really behave as vowelless words. |
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That is, phonetically they are consonants, but phonemically they behave as vowels. |
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The hard words in the passage have been spelled phonetically. |
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They believe that stressed vowels in open syllables remained phonetically short, and a consonant grapheme in intervocalic position usually represents a single consonant. |
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The dialect was also popularized by the comic magazine Viz, where the dialect is often conveyed phonetically by unusual spellings within the comic strips. |
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Icelandic has very minor dialectal differences phonetically. |
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However, phonetically these are now considered a conflation of tone and final consonant and are seldom counted as individual tones in modern linguistics. |
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This nominalised rendering of mana would give a direction to Selwyn's interpretation of phonetically similar concepts he encountered in the Melanesian islands. |
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Phonetically there is no voicing distinction among the stops, rather the distinction is one of aspiration and fortis vs. |
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