Language is a unifying factor, as Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish are mutually intelligible languages. |
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Old English and Old Norse were related and to some extent mutually intelligible. |
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In the second case, the changes are intelligible, the result of self-directed activity. |
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It is not necessary to try to ascend to a level of second-order reasons in a desperate bid to render this conception of action intelligible. |
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To make it more intelligible, ironically, photojournalism is often deconstructed as art. |
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Political circumstances beginning nearly a thousand years ago separated populations, but Slovak and Czech are still mutually intelligible. |
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Several seconds passed before the communication was decrypted and became intelligible. |
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The issue largely depends on whether the oracle normally gave her responses in glossolalic or in intelligible speech. |
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Now some of the mysterious proscriptions in chapter eleven of Leviticus become more intelligible. |
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It's frankly ridiculous to suggest that, even with perfect articulation and diction, the singers' words will all be intelligible. |
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My whole mind whirled around me, thinking so many thoughts that I couldn't distinguish anything intelligible. |
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He cried out again, a less intelligible scream, and doubled up with wave after abject wave of nauseating pain. |
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He was simply trying to paint a picture of a possible or intelligible immaterial world. |
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The audio is full, with intelligible dialogue and good use of bass in the music. |
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If this is so, we may conclude that the material component in the definition of a species is intelligible matter. |
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Artificially generated speech now sounds more human, and has become more intelligible. |
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Or at least it's the shtick that sets the tone for the evening's witty and intelligible discourse. |
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Yet they do not mean that there would be no intelligible reality outside our scholarly discourses. |
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Nevertheless, morality is intelligible only as a social discipline based on general rules impartially applied. |
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Other regions of Panay have their own distinct speech forms, but these are mutually intelligible with Hiligaynon. |
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Need I add that some of these things were as intelligible to me as Hittite tablets by the time that day arrived? |
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Even though the Czech and Slovak languages are closely related and mutually intelligible, many Czechs viewed Slovak as a caricature of Czech. |
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Many of these potential and actual readers were computer illiterati buying their first machine, and needed intelligible guidance. |
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The surrounds are used appropriately and dialogue is clear and intelligible. |
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Attendees are guaranteed that at least one-third of all words used will be intelligible to the general public. |
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An examination structure, intelligible to pupils, parents and employers, must be a priority as a means of getting these proposals off the ground. |
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For the last year or so of his life, he never uttered one intelligible word or showed the slightest sign of knowing who or where he was. |
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Studies show that a person is more intelligible to an individual who can both see and hear them than for either method alone. |
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I had to clear my throat a few times before I could give him an intelligible reply. |
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Before he could make any intelligible reply, the doors behind the reception slid open and a pretty secretary walked out. |
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Very little of it is intelligible, you understand, but don't think that stops her in the least. |
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While it's clear and intelligible, a musical really deserves at least a stereo soundtrack. |
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He remains one of the rare leading academics whose work is intelligible to normal people. |
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Icelandic and Faroese, however, are no longer immediately intelligible to other Scandinavians, even though they retain many features of original Scandinavian. |
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This is the Private Language Argument, the burden of which is that there can be no such thing as a language invented by and intelligible to a single individual only. |
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With time, the fierceness and the collective sweetness that underscored it grew more intelligible. |
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That makes the lyrics intelligible without reducing the music's intensity. |
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This bit of dry data, presented in charts and tables of figures intelligible only to specialists, links the unremarkable urban events with the movement of the stars. |
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The two Mayan languages of the Classic period, Yucatecan and Cholan, have subdivided into about thirty separate languages, some of which are not mutually intelligible. |
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Andrew Marvell takes this amatory literary tradition and transforms it so that it can be used to make intelligible the dynamics of a political and religious struggle. |
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In this way More sought to demonstrate that the idea of incorporeal substance, or spirit, was as intelligible as that of corporeal substance, i.e. body. |
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Attacked and defended by a thousand politicians and pamphleteers, it has held the field as the only theory which provides an intelligible, self-consistent, workable system. |
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Prices, timetables, documentation requirements, booking advice, and most any other factoid you could possibly need are perfectly intelligible and easy to find. |
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He has converted an untuneful rabble into a disciplined, harmonious, intelligible Orchestra and fortunate will be the band that next obtains his services. |
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He was speaking plain enough to be very intelligible to Emma. |
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How much can you leave out while keeping it intelligible, he asks? |
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Obvious differences do persist, particularly in accent and intonation, but the idea of the thick-accented, barely intelligible Paddy is anachronistic. |
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Mine was only a middle-ranking independent school, so that's why I was relatively intelligible but prone to waffling after a few glasses of sherry. |
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This goes for the languages of the Scandinavian countries, Swedish, Danish and Norwegian, which are mutually intelligible. |
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And if the mind of the whole is taken to be a distinct consciousness, its relation to its beminded parts also requires to be made intelligible. |
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Since glory is as bonifiable as it is intelligible, the saints in glory are glorified as much through bonifying as through understanding. |
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To communicate with others, someone who knew him well would translate his speech into intelligible speech. |
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The variation among the German dialects is considerable, with often only neighbouring dialects being mutually intelligible. |
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Some dialects are not intelligible to people who know only Standard German. |
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Apart from specialized vocabulary, Urdu is mutually intelligible with Standard Hindi, another recognized register of Hindustani. |
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Both were mutually intelligible as one and the same language, which was true until the second half of the 7th century. |
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Apart from specialized vocabulary, Hindi is mutually intelligible with Standard Urdu, another recognized register of Hindustani. |
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Another important point is that Homer recognises that the speech of Trojans and Greeks was mutually intelligible. |
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Chinese consists of hundreds of local varieties, many of which are not mutually intelligible. |
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Afrikaans, although mutually intelligible with Dutch, is not a dialect but a separate standardised language. |
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Along with Swedish and Danish, Norwegian forms a dialect continuum of more or less mutually intelligible local and regional variants. |
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Lithuanian is a Baltic language, closely related to Latvian, although they are not mutually intelligible. |
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The present is only intelligible in the light of the past, often a very remote past indeed. |
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In 1869, a royal commission recommended that both should be recast in a simple and intelligible shape. |
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In these terms, Danish and Norwegian, though mutually intelligible to a large degree, are considered separate languages. |
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Until the advent of Modern Dutch after 1500, there was no overarching standard language but the dialects were all mutually intelligible. |
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Below is an incomplete list of fully and partially mutually intelligible varieties sometimes considered languages. |
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Bordering dialects very probably continued to be mutually intelligible even beyond the boundaries of the consonant shift. |
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In fact, many dialects of Limburgish and Ripuarian are still mutually intelligible today. |
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Although both extremes are considered German, they are not mutually intelligible. |
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In other cases, even neighbouring dialects may hardly be mutually intelligible. |
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Both were mutually intelligible as one and the same language, which was true until very approximately the second half of the 7th century. |
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Different national standards derived from a dialect continuum may be regarded as different languages, even if they are mutually intelligible. |
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It is also said that dialects, in contrast with languages, are mutually intelligible, though this is not always the case. |
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By the time of the American Revolution, varieties among slave creoles were not quite mutually intelligible. |
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Luther's translation used the variant of German spoken at the Saxon chancellery, intelligible to both northern and southern Germans. |
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To make this mid-17th-century rat's nest of love affairs and sexual confusions intelligible for late-20th-century audiences is a job in itself. |
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He stood there speechlessly. The surprise had rendered him unable to make an intelligible reply. |
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This is also how the role of technoselves in contemporary life becomes intelligible. |
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Faroese and Icelandic are hardly mutually intelligible with Norwegian in their spoken form because continental Scandinavian has diverged from them. |
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All three languages are to a degree mutually intelligible and can be, and commonly are, employed in communication among inhabitants of the Scandinavian countries. |
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Faroese and Icelandic, sometimes referred to as insular Scandinavian languages, are intelligible in continental Scandinavian languages only to a limited extent. |
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Key abstract theorems are explained largely by physical reasoning, and are presented in the most concrete, intelligible fashion possible. Epsilontics are minimized. |
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It is a question that can only be formulated in terms of an asker, a point of reference, and an intender and that consequently can be intelligible only in human terms. |
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Vocabulary is intelligible and unambiguous, with few hapax legomena. |
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These themes are that modal operators are intelligible in their own right and that actualist quantifiers are to be taken as basic with respect to possibilist quantifiers. |
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They remained mutually intelligible throughout the Migration Period. |
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Dutch was until 1925 an official language in South Africa but evolved in and was replaced by Afrikaans, a partially mutually intelligible daughter language of Dutch. |
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In literature this often involved the rejection of intelligible plots or characterization in novels, or the creation of poetry that defied clear interpretation. |
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Over the course of the fourth to eighth centuries, Vulgar Latin, by this time highly dialectalized, broke up into discrete languages that were no longer mutually intelligible. |
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Although under heavy influence of the Dutch standard language, it is not mutually intelligible with Dutch and considered a sister language of Dutch, like English and German. |
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Some dialects differ considerably from the standard language in grammar and vocabulary and are not always mutually intelligible with Standard Swedish. |
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Dutch was until 1925 an official language in South Africa, but evolved in and was replaced by Afrikaans, a partially mutually intelligible daughter language of Dutch. |
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The languages of Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, Icelandic and Faroese are all rooted in Old Norse and Danish, Norwegian and Swedish are considered mutually intelligible. |
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It is closely related to the Breton language, and to a lesser extent shares commonalities with the Welsh language, although they are not mutually intelligible. |
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Einstein accepted Spinoza's idea that the laws of nature are thoroughly intelligible, and, by Einstein's own admission, this Spinozist belief inspired much of his thinking. |
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Through koineization, new dialect varieties are brought about as a result of contact between speakers of mutually intelligible varieties of that language. |
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