If Eddie's voice is clear and inflected with humour, not so the official speech of the forces assembled against him. |
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His English is virtually nonexistent, and his Krio, the local language, is inflected with his native Italian. |
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It therefore cannot be further inflected as if it were a nominative singular noun. |
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Still, it was different, as was Masur's dry-eyed but sensitively inflected interpretation. |
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We list the instances of suppletion and give examples of regular inflected items when they are available. |
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There are two present-tense verbs here, both inflected for plural agreement. |
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A mantra is a kind of prayer that contains the name of God that is inflected grammatically in the dative case. |
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One could discuss the use of cars in the film as emblems of the middle and upper classes being inflected socially as well as aesthetically. |
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The jazz inflected vocal and instrumental solos could have been written by Weill. |
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One interesting aspect should be the interaction between task and word types because there are many inflected verbs in the agglutinative Turkish. |
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Are the words not only correct, but also pronounced accurately and clearly, and are they inflected appropriately and expressively? |
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This time, she spoke in English inflected with a German accent so that Loren could hear what she had to say. |
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I did not know whether it was her abnormal dress, her desire for death, or her oddly inflected voice but this girl was something new. |
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It gives a similar soothing and tranquil atmosphere but not boring, with its folky textures and jazz inflected sounds. |
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Pletnev seems eager to convince us that these are very important works, and so everything is inflected, almost to the point of fussiness. |
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As the patterns of notes or letters are inflected, moments of fulfillment or stability are perceived. |
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That is, the approach I have described as Curtin's might be inflected by American practices, such as those at Iowa. |
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There are brief mentions of how Washington's punch resulted in him receiving death threats, many of them inflected with racial epithets. |
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The angular process of the dentary is inflected medially in almost all marsupials. |
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It's difficult to decide, too, whether the resulting structures are acutely inflected paintings or polychrome sculptures. |
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Only correct reactions from the regularly and irregularly inflected verb conditions were analyzed. |
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It was as indiscernible and unimportant as my newly inflected mid-Atlantic accent. |
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Clark's talent has always been about paradox, the chaste classical lines of his choreography inflected with a blatant sexual frisson. |
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A new cautionary diction, an uncustomary prudence inflected our way of talking to one another. |
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If Davis was unable to communicate his enthusiasm for this composer to his vocal forces, he did manage to draw warmly inflected playing from the orchestra. |
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By contrast, the final verb is not marked for switch-reference but is fully inflected for such categories, and this inflection is relevant to the whole clause chain. |
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She kept her voice clear, the words precisely pronounced and inflected. |
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At the west end, off Europa Boulevard, the glass screen is inflected. |
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Work that is less inflected than Marasela's may elicit the same doubt. |
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There are indications, however, that a new generation is starting to find its own voice, tempered and inflected by more exotic influences and general intellectual curiosity. |
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While Mazurek's early recordings showcased his ability as a player of straight bop inflected jazz, since then his concern seems to have been to strip away the extraneous. |
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For it is through words that our understanding of things get even more complicated, inflected, and obscured as the processes of representation and seeing run their course. |
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In noun compounds in English, the modifying noun may be singular or an irregularly inflected plural, but regularly inflected plurals are dispreferred. |
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The return of the minor mode of the first aria at the conclusion provides dramatic resolution to the work where the poet's deceived heart is inflected with irony. |
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Bantu languages were praised for their terminations at the beginning, so that the words are inflected, conjugated, or defined by means of a system of prefixes. |
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Each of these languages features a highly inflected grammar. |
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Snarling opener Nice To See You, Nice Surprise had Edwards wrapping his raspy vocal around guitarist Lee Bryce's wah-wah inflected hooks. |
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The argument in favour of calling Middle English a creole comes from the extreme reduction in inflected forms from Old English to Middle English. |
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Affixal homonymy triggers full-form storage, even with inflected words, even in a morphologically rich language. |
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Selkup shows clear tendencies for the cliticization of the copula, but the freestanding inflected copula can still appear on occasion. |
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English verbs are inflected for tense and aspect, and marked for agreement with third person singular subject. |
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Only the copula verb to be is still inflected for agreement with the plural and first and second person subjects. |
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A regular Latin noun belongs to one of five main declensions, a group of nouns with similar inflected forms. |
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Thus, word order is not as important in Latin as it is in English, which is less inflected. |
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The table below displays the common inflected endings for the indicative mood in the active voice in all six tenses. |
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Welsh nouns belong to one of two grammatical genders, masculine and feminine, but they are not inflected for case. |
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In the preterite, future and conditional mood tenses, there are inflected forms of all verbs, which are used in the written language. |
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Old Norse was inflected, but modern Swedish, Norwegian, and Danish have lost much of its inflection. |
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This process is extensively developed in Estonian and Sami, and makes them also inflected, not only agglutinating languages. |
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Basque, a language isolate, is a highly inflected language, heavily inflecting both nouns and verbs. |
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Modal verbs are defective insofar as they cannot be inflected, nor do they appear as gerunds, infinitives, or participles. |
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Such sentences are sometimes said This applies particularly to languages that use different inflected verb forms to make questions. |
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Unlike modern English, but like Old English, Old Saxon is an inflected language, rich in morphological diversity. |
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Old Saxon nouns were inflected in very different ways following their classes. |
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As a result of these inflected forms, native speakers remain aware of the underlying voiced phoneme, and spell accordingly. |
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The grammar of Old English is quite different from that of Modern English, predominantly by being much more inflected. |
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However adjectives are not inflected, and most verb forms do not distinguish between singular and plural. |
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They are considered separate pronouns if contrasting to languages where pronouns are regularly inflected in the genitive. |
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It may still apply in inflected forms of such words containing an additional final consonant sound, such as cities, Charlie's and hurried. |
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Most Slavic languages are highly inflected, except for Bulgarian and Macedonian. |
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The distinction between inflected and periphrastic forms is usually illustrated across distinct languages. |
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Even strongly inflected synthetic languages sometimes make use of periphrasis to fill out an inflectional paradigm that is missing certain forms. |
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Aside from their highly inflected forms, German relative pronouns are less complicated than English. |
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Affixal homonymy triggers full-form storage even with inflected words, even in a morphologically rich language. |
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Cornish nouns belong to one of two grammatical genders, masculine and feminine, but are not inflected for case. |
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Latin is a highly inflected language, with many grammatical forms for various words. |
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The case marking pattern for each noun being inflected depends on the noun's degree of animacy. |
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Old Norse was a moderately inflected language with high levels of nominal and verbal inflection. |
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Note the sometimes identical form of the uninflected preposition and its third person singular masculine inflected form. |
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Adjectives are compared as in English, and are also inflected according to gender, number and definiteness. |
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Because French nouns are not inflected for gender, a noun's form cannot specify its gender. |
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Middle Dutch adjectives inflected according to the gender, case and number of the noun they modified. |
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The word order of Gothic is fairly free like that of other heavily inflected languages with several noun cases. |
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Many adjectives, however, particularly those that are longer and less common, do not have inflected comparative and superlative forms. |
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Below is the declension of the English pronoun I, which is inflected for case and number. |
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Languages that add inflectional morphemes to words are sometimes called inflectional languages, which is a synonym for inflected languages. |
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Old English was a moderately inflected language, using an extensive case system similar to that of modern Icelandic or German. |
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But in New Zealand, the figure of the Maori was also inflected by associated theories of Celticism by Mathew Arnold, Ernest Renan, and the writers of the Celtic Twilight. |
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Adjectives, nouns and articles are considerably less inflected than verbs, but they still have different forms according to number and grammatical gender. |
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For more details on some of the considerations that apply to regularly and irregularly inflected forms, see the article on regular and irregular verbs. |
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The inflected melisma of the cadenza seals Lelia's sexuality, for its chromaticism is traditionally linked with wickedness and sexuality in the Renaissance. |
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An organized list of the inflected forms of a given lexeme or root word, is called its declension if it is a noun, or its conjugation if it is a verb. |
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Hughes's later work is deeply reliant upon myth and the British bardic tradition, heavily inflected with a modernist, Jungian and ecological viewpoint. |
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Baltic verbs are inflected for tense, mood, aspect, and voice. |
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In addition to the usual inflected tenses, ve also has a present tense. |
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This means that these languages will have inflected adpositions. |
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The use of the older inflected form den in the dative or accusative as well as use of 'der' in the dative are restricted to numerous set phrases, surnames and toponyms. |
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The inclusion of adverbs here requires that traditional adverbs that are inflected in comparison be classified as adjectives, as is sometimes done. |
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The correspondence in meaning across inflected forms and their periphrastic equivalents within the same language or across different languages leads to a basic question. |
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Old English is an inflected language, and as such its nouns, pronouns, adjectives and determiners must be declined in order to serve a grammatical function. |
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These words, like other adjectives, inflected for gender, number and case. |
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In Classical Chinese, pronouns were overtly inflected to mark case. |
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Modern German remains moderately inflected, retaining four noun cases, although the genitive started falling into disuse in all but formal writing in Early New High German. |
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Lexemes may be inflected to express different grammatical categories. |
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