Instead she makes expansive, wall-filling abstractions in her unique vocabulary of dynamic brushstrokes. |
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The results suggest that even after 30 years of non-use, residual vocabulary knowledge can be found. |
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One way to improve the accuracy of voice recognition is to restrict the vocabulary of the system. |
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Her mixing of classical dance vocabulary with more obscure movements and vocalising has clear intention and direction. |
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Learning a vocabulary of dance steps has become as essential for the clued-up traveller as carrying the latest Rough Guide phrase book. |
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You see a lot of the contemporary people using the ballet vocabulary and the ballet people using the contemporary vocabulary. |
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The children, however tentative, seem to take joy in participating in the creative process using a movement vocabulary they love. |
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In an excerpt from Daughters of the Ocean, she demonstrated the interweaving of martial arts movements like tai chi into her dance vocabulary. |
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Like his Judson colleagues, his choreography eschewed an advanced dance technique, and he incorporated everyday movements into his vocabulary. |
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But Martins just doesn't have the vocabulary or perhaps the artistic reach to evoke such imagery as dramatically as Adams does. |
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A visionary, she developed a new and wholly unique dance technique and vocabulary of steps and movements. |
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He is constantly discovering and adding new movements to the tango vocabulary. |
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Canales is at ease within a flamenco vocabulary, but his choreographic forays into contemporary dance are sadly cliched. |
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He compiled the vocabulary by taking words from English, French, German and Latin. |
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It includes sample text, grammar and vocabulary lists and more for 1,445 languages. |
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Even children who have just learnt to spell words can play and sometimes their limited vocabulary becomes an advantage. |
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The problem is that my French vocabulary is so poor that I end up having to look up every other word in a dictionary so it takes ages. |
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One can argue that, given equal exposure to words, the size of an individual's vocabulary reflects the individual's cognitive skills. |
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Standards in English could be higher if children used a wider vocabulary and more complex sentences in their oral and written work. |
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Stephen Lewis used his unmatched vocabulary and stirring oratorical style to take globalization to task. |
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Four years of living in Manchester had taken their toll on his vocabulary and, very occasionally, his accent. |
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His English vocabulary has improved but he prefers Hindi in press conferences so that his friends back home can understand. |
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Of all writers, he discovers, Shakespeare has the widest vocabulary relating to the varieties of weeds found in rural Warwickshire. |
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This was the day that the word contemplative entered my vocabulary, giving shape to the way I wanted to live my life. |
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When you learn to develop your vocabulary then you won't have to use bad language as often. |
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So if you don't hear and process those sounds accurately and quickly, your whole vocabulary and therefore your language system, is undermined. |
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His English vocabulary as yet does not amount to much more than pitch, ball, and goal. |
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As an added bonus, I realised, new falconers get to learn a vocabulary of Medieval English for free. |
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The implication is that the vocabulary of praise is learned in the cult, and then believers apply it in their daily lives. |
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But I venture that not even cricket has a vocabulary as wide and arcane as that of sailing. |
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For example, anyone who has looked at a flora or fauna knows that the vocabulary can be specialized and complex. |
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We currently lack a vocabulary for identifying a wide range of abuses that harm public assets and social ecology. |
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So, I'm learning the vocabulary for a lot of topics like boy-girl problems, but little about finance, which is what I should be learning. |
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Some poets in Tottel's text did employ religious vocabulary as rhetorical window dressing. |
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Like wine tasters, coffee tasters have developed a specialized vocabulary to analyze the complex flavors and feel of a cup of coffee. |
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And it was in the second part of his speech that he adopted both a new vocabulary and an old style. |
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We try to keep their intensity and power alive as we learn the violent vocabulary of citizenship. |
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First, one must have a firm command over classical Arabic language including its vocabulary, grammar, metaphors, and idioms. |
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Abstract words form the bulk of the vocabulary of major modern languages like English. |
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For Lope, proper poetry must be intelligently written and must not deviate from the normative vocabulary of the Spanish language. |
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It was right there, the third word in the weekly vocabulary list our teacher had just handed out. |
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By giving use and visibility to the general usage of metadata, there's an incentive to converge on the same vocabulary. |
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Here's a list of nonce words in my colourful vocabulary that have not yet found their way into any dictionary. |
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The fragment seemed Kosher, with phraseology, vocabulary, metaphor, style and expression of apparent authenticity and verisimilitude. |
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A future hope is that a more sophisticated classification system of the vocabulary of wine can match the knowledge of its drinkers. |
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Well-travelled, her sojourns in Italy, Japan and India have enriched her visual, spatial and conceptual vocabulary. |
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Although, thinking about it, I'm sure my vocabulary has been enlarged in previously unexplored directions by the energetic neologists of spam. |
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Like Clark Coolidge, whose verve depends on malapropism, neologism, and ricochet, Roberts bounces back and forth within a multivalent vocabulary. |
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We wanted to develop and share a vocabulary about learning, especially in the humanities. |
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He chose antiquated vocabulary, from religious literature and classical poetry, and avoided neologisms. |
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The vocabulary of generating and creating jobs out of unthrifty behavior sounds to noneconomists tough and prudential and quantitative. |
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There are tables and diagrams and a vocabulary of the terms used by the author to navigate the readers though the book. |
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Each group of ten unseens is preceded by a vocabulary of some thirty words. |
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Pidginization can entail loss of all bound morphology, many free grammatical morphemes, and even a large part of the vocabulary. |
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Moreover, even with the borrowings from flamenco, the movement vocabulary was thin, with very little formal choreography. |
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An awesome bandleader, Eckstine first fronted a bop big band with musicians who established the vocabulary of modern jazz. |
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There are 28 booklets in all, related to subjects such as arithmetic, literacy or vocabulary. |
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Actually, I find the candidates a bit adorably nerdy when they lapse into this kind of bookish vocabulary. |
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Students' formal vocabulary can be quite extensive and the more advanced sometimes produce somewhat bombastic performances. |
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The 46-word vocabulary test was derived from the multidimensional aptitude battery. |
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The book is written in clear, simple language with an unchallenging vocabulary. |
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Its purpose is to establish a vocabulary for describing the sensations of astringency and mouthfeel in red wines. |
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Those abilities included picture naming, verbal fluency, vocabulary comprehension, visual memory, and the learning of unassociated word pairs. |
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The vernacular provided Shakespeare with a mother lode of new words, and he used his imagination to build up his vocabulary. |
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Today's politicians have found that a Spanish vocabulary is useful for disguising silver-spoon roots and expressing solidarity with the masses. |
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As these heraldic arms became more elaborate, their description or blazon came to acquire its own rules, arcane vocabulary, and concise syntax. |
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If you're only looking for certain vocabulary words in certain places, why not just offer an essay template where students fill in the blanks? |
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The play has a distinctively harsh and gritty vocabulary and poetic tone throughout, thriving on rough monosyllables. |
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Group 3 read the short story with the tested vocabulary and used the monolingual English dictionary while taking the same multiple-choice test. |
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Offering critics a helping hand by planting for their use a ready-made descriptive vocabulary reflects his shrewdness of strategy. |
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For some that meant moving from writing each idea on a separate line to using headers and underlining vocabulary words. |
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Experiments were performed on the North American Business News task using a 60,000 word vocabulary and a trigram language model. |
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Corrugated steel roofing, shiny cylindrical smokestacks, and shiplap siding extend the outbuilding vocabulary. |
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Except possibly for trainsick, not ordinary vocabulary for second-graders who don't play trapball. |
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Many people read nothing but newspapers, others religious tracts and books but in the end, such people cultivate a limited range of vocabulary. |
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Its grammar is simpler than that of Middle Persian, and it has absorbed a vast Arabic vocabulary. |
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In a sense, an extensive vocabulary appears to have mistakenly become a touchstone by which one's English proficiency is judged and assessed. |
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He wrote in an often opaque and always toplofty style, with a specialized vocabulary derived from the social sciences. |
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Perhaps the shift from behaviorism to cognitive psychology has given educators a richer vocabulary to describe mental processes. |
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She works the vocabulary of dance to move her plots and caresses characters with lush, sensuous descriptions. |
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The real communication problems arise surely from divergent vocabulary and semantics. |
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I answered as best I could, but I didn't have the vocabulary to describe things he had no conception of. |
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This is, of course, not by chance, but part of a careful selection of vocabulary and symbols created to contest the existential dilemma. |
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Neutelings Reidijk's architecture, expressed in a tough industrial vocabulary, has a sculptural and, at times, theatrical intensity. |
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Urdu uses an Arabic script, but Persian vocabulary and Hindi grammatical structure. |
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And though the movement vocabulary was unmistakably balletic, the visual appeal of the work may more often be associated with rock music videos. |
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They had the perseverance to keep enlarging their vocabulary, their accuracy, their present, past and future verb tenses, the whole ball of wax. |
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Kay presents overwhelming evidence of the distinctive vocabulary, syntax and grammar of Scots. |
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At the moment I am trying to master 5 different tenses of verbs and also adverbs, pronouns and other vocabulary. |
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People these days are so caught up in work that leisure is a bad word in their vocabulary. |
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It is easier to understand mangled grammar than new vocabulary, because people mangle grammar constantly. |
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The Scandinavian languages of the Viking settlers penetrated much more deeply into English vocabulary, syntax, morphology, and phonology. |
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He developed an exquisite style and precise vocabulary that are unique to his Malay writings and language. |
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Its vocabulary is mostly French, with a few Malagasy, Bantu, English, and Hindi words. |
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As a result, the Arabic food vocabulary is as saturated with Persian words as English is with French. |
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Several varieties of Spanish, Quechua, and Aymara are spoken, and all have influenced one another in vocabulary, phonology, syntax, and grammar. |
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English prides itself on being the magpie language, freely picking up foreign words to incorporate into its flexible vocabulary. |
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There's still time to integrate the new words into your vocabulary, which may endear you to the nearest sapiosexual. |
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The language with the smallest vocabulary in the world is a Creole called Taki-Taki spoken in Suriname, South America. |
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But underneath that tough, macho veneer lies a tanned and buffed pretty boy with the vocabulary of a 12-year-old. |
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Note that the keywords need to be selected by the taggers from a controlled vocabulary list to ensure consistency in application and retrieval. |
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The phonological similarity between Ulster and Lowland Scots is reinforced by vocabulary, although many traditional words are in decline. |
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My daughter is so rarely ill that she has had to augment her vocabulary at a time when her brain least feels like assimilating information. |
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Finally, she runs out of words and it looks like it is now my turn to practice my vocabulary. |
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Yes, I do feel if Urdu has to survive as a literary language it has to increase its vocabulary. |
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The simple lessons of the making of an arch, a wall, or a column form the architect's most fundamental vocabulary. |
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Black Carib, also known as Garifuna language, is an amalgam of an Arawak language, African vocabulary, and some English additions. |
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The visual vocabulary of the Baroque and rococo, which the Europeans brought to Brazil, also lends itself to sublime extravagance. |
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In studying the theory test, I had to absorb a lot of road sign and driving theory vocabulary. |
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Although similar to other Slavic languages, especially Czech, Slovak is linguistically distinct with its own grammar and vocabulary. |
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We have relations of meaning such as synonymy and antonymy, polysemy and homonymy, ways of organizing the vocabulary. |
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It is the language of the Psalms, the stories of the patriarchs, the parables of the gospels, the moral vocabulary of St. Paul's epistles. |
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In pidgins and creoles these metaphorical uses are an important means of extending a restricted vocabulary with limited syntactic means. |
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Most importantly, it will require market research firms to develop a new vocabulary and new sensibility. |
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I'm learning a whole new vocabulary, a secret lexicon known only to amputees and prosthetists. |
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I couldn't write good lyrics in English, because my vocabulary is too poor. |
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Every track is just a rant delivered over a monotonous beat and the limited vocabulary would be laughable were it not so obscene. |
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His goal was to create new categories, to use the vocabulary of landscape and genre paintings for the most consecrated art. |
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As David moved into the allegro section of class, he identified two purposes, strengthening the body and building a vocabulary of steps. |
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They cover terms that provide the beginnings of a viable working vocabulary for describing meter. |
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On some occasions, the vocabulary that she employs in her response to Derrida is recriminatory. |
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When Pablo showed me a series of notebooks full of English vocabulary lists and self-created grammar drills, I had to agree. |
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There is also some international vocabulary which came into Kyrgyz mostly by way of Russian. |
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It has a contemporary edge that recalls, without appropriating, the vocabulary of William Forsythe. |
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She kept on trying to talk to me in English even if her vocabulary was pretty limited. |
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The emphasis is on learning simple words and expressions while building vocabulary rather than grammar. |
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A specialized vocabulary described parts of harness fittings such as whiffletrees, reins, breechings, traces, collars, hames and pole straps. |
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Based on results from the vocabulary and reading comprehension sections, participants were assigned a percentile rank. |
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Maltese is a Semitic language, with heavy borrowing from Italian and French in vocabulary. |
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Accompaniment patterns lay comfortably in the hand and the broad harmonic vocabulary includes a few bold moments where accidentals abound. |
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Some individuals can also change their dialects to a limited extent in terms of accent, pronunciation, and vocabulary. |
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By the mid-sixteenth century cacao had acquired status as an elite beverage in New Spain, and a material culture and vocabulary had been developed or acquired to accompany it. |
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From aqua Buddha to Wikileaks, 2010 gave us a bounty of new words for our political vocabulary. |
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In Britain, we don't have such gems of railway vocabulary as jerkwater. |
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During Soviet times, when Russian was the only real language of importance, Kazakh failed to keep up with the changing vocabulary of the twentieth century. |
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This crepuscular conflict requires a new vocabulary and a familiarity with a new type of history. |
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But if you dress up the idea in a forbidding vocabulary, full of neologisms and recondite references to philosophy, then you may have a prescription for academic stardom. |
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It is the brainchild of Marc Okrand, who invented a complete language, with its own vocabulary, grammar, and usage to make the Klingons sound, well, more alien. |
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Among the reference books on display at the exhibition are several popular dictionaries and wordbooks, all aimed at increasing vocabulary and improving communication skills. |
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It's one thing to be able to carry on a simple conversation with a limited vocabulary, and quite another to talk and express oneself knowledgeably in the language. |
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The Wyandot language has no native speakers today, so these vocabulary words come from early 19th-century sources and their pronunciation is uncertain. |
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Off camera, Rooney was growing up fast, ditching school and developing an impressive vocabulary of curse words. |
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As for our ever-expanding vocabulary, lexicographers cannot data mine the information tsunami fast enough to record each new tech term entering the mainstream. |
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Respondents in both groups typically viewed their personal lexicon as containing less than 40,000 words, and the size of their active vocabulary as no more than 20,000 words. |
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It has none of the apparatus of a study volume, and its conceptual vocabulary belongs to the sphere of ecumenists and ecclesiologists, not to a general audience. |
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My language is a variant of Gujarati, with many Arabic vocabulary words. |
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But, he smiled as he studied his vocabulary lists, if his plan was to emigrate out of the Balkans, learning Romance languages would be the way to go. |
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Although generally Italianate, it could also borrow from Romanesque prototypes that preserved the round arches and the basic vocabulary of parts familiar from antiquity. |
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Here, the vocabulary of fast food for many young Brazilians is temaki instead of burgers and fries. |
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But when did Passion become a specialised term of church vocabulary, like the Ascension, to describe a very specific period in the life of Christ? |
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It also supports automatic spell-checking and formatting, and its autocompletion feature appears to have a bigger vocabulary than the other version. |
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He writes his own lyrics, but it's virtually impossible to say in what language, he borrows words from Estonian, Finnish, and even throws in his own made-up vocabulary. |
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In an uncanny way, that describes the precise definition of the hipster, when the term first appeared in the American vocabulary. |
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Kate made her first trip out of doors last night since hyperemesis gravidarum became part of our vocabulary. |
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What people are really afraid of is something that has its own vocabulary and idiom because it strikes them dumb. |
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Are spelling standards and vocabulary up to scratch in Southland schools? |
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Mrs Morris, a former English teacher in Thailand, said people could broaden their Thai vocabulary easily if they were prepared to put in the time. |
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These pure language mavens always come up with the notion people who use language that shocks their shell-pink ears are simply lacking in vocabulary. |
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The whole point of negligence law is to provide society with a vocabulary through which victims can confront their injurers which does not demand proof of criminal conduct. |
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What's more, these commands are part of the developmental vocabulary of mesenchyme cells generally, and are understood in more or less the same way throughout the embryo. |
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Indeed, the uneven vocabulary of sexual difference can be seen as part of a movement that itself sought to conjoin and serialize socio-sexual practices and behaviors. |
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One of the few Russian words to have entered the vocabulary of other languages, dacha originally meant a parcel of land given by the tsar to his aristocratic servitors. |
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The base of the minarets is covered by what seems to be almost temple shikharas rising one upon the other, vocabulary extensively used in a classical temple. |
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In others, such as Hausa, Shona, and Swahili, because of bilingualism and code-mixing, the influence may have affected not only vocabulary but also structure. |
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The monolingual reader, free from vocabulary and prior knowledge demands, was able to concentrate on the interpretation and comprehension of the text as a whole. |
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In some circumstances, languages borrow morphology as well as vocabulary. |
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Much like eggnog, mulled wine recipes are part of our winter vocabulary. |
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Sometimes Iwai lets the words remain superimposed over the proceeding images, but never enough to push the film into the stuffy vocabulary of multimedia. |
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Political correctness was not part of her vocabulary, but anti-Semitic verbiage was. |
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The most recent influence to be felt in Britain has been the arrival in the 20th century, via India and Pakistan, of much of the vocabulary of Persian food. |
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Without the freedom to act on moral values, there is not even a vocabulary for public virtue. |
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Its story, plus the accompanying libel lawsuit, has provided journalists everywhere with the opportunity to enrich their vocabulary with synonyms for upchucking. |
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In the case of Yiddish, the grammar is mainly Germanic, but the vocabulary and certain other features of the language draw on Hebraic, Romance, and Slavic sources as well. |
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His vocabulary and manner of speech sounded as though it belonged to a British nobleman, but his voice was that of a typical New York male of his age. |
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Thanks to foreign influences, particularly Latin and Greek, on the English vocabulary, a large number of foreign words were absorbed in the English language. |
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These people absorbed into their language some of the vocabulary of the native populations of the area, but the identity and origin of these earlier peoples is now unknown. |
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Just as the vocabulary of a language changes from age to age, so the vocabularies of different languages are distinct in their systems, uses, and references. |
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It is often said that the vocabulary of a language is an inventory of the items a culture talks about and has categorized in order to make sense of the world. |
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Soon the young language was not only standing on its own two grammatical feet, it also possessed the largest vocabulary of any language on the planet. |
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There isn't a word in the English vocabulary to describe her. |
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Prior to entering, she studied concepts such as defining her business and its services, learning basic business vocabulary, and marketing and management. |
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These, and similar phrases, form the vocabulary of dictatorship. |
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His arguments, phrased in the vocabulary of the modern scientist and based upon the latest of neurological studies, are those of nineteenth century liberalism. |
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His vocabulary, in German, was still largely that of a nine-year-old, to which had been added a set of fluent phrases and terms needed to do business. |
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Preschoolers expand their vocabulary and learn sentence structure. |
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His ornate and difficult vocabulary shows the influence of Irish models. |
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Each beat has its own language, a vocabulary of terms, a collection of jargon, a way of describing things that you must master but not allow to be limiting. |
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I try not to be conscious of music philosophy, but to stay tuned to attitude and phraseology and the musical vocabulary of the area that spawned me. |
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As his career progressed, he added Italian Renaissance motifs to his Gothic vocabulary. |
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Only sound changes that had an effect on one or more of the vocabulary items are shown. |
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However, there is also evidence of the influence of West African languages on AAVE vocabulary and grammar. |
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Neologisms are distinct from a person's idiolect, one's unique patterns of vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation. |
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In Cornish vocabulary, a large number of the lexical items are language and culture specific. |
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By far the largest part of the modern vocabulary of Norwegian dates back to Old Norse. |
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The Baltic Germans spoke a distinct Low German dialect, which has influenced the vocabulary and phonetics of both Estonian and Latvian languages. |
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It includes vocabulary related to home, people, action words, description words, pronouns, prepositions, and question words. |
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Many languages have borrowed vocabulary from Arabic and that makes it a source language. |
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Film and dance theory offer a productive vocabulary for considering the effects of these mutings and deafenings. |
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These account for some of the differences in vocabulary between Indonesian and Malay. |
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Dutch vocabulary is mostly Germanic and incorporates slightly more Romance loans than German but far fewer than English. |
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Hundreds of indigenous languages around the world are taught by traditional means, including vocabulary, grammar, readings and recordings. |
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Traditional dialects differ both in phonology, grammar and vocabulary from standard Danish. |
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Williams was concerned to establish the changing meanings of the vocabulary used in discussions of culture. |
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It is important to note here that bilinguals' overall vocabulary size in both languages combined was equivalent to monolinguals' in one language. |
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Everyday English vocabulary remained mostly Germanic, with Old Norse influence becoming apparent. |
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Of course, netty was one of the many words used in our vocabulary known as Geordie twank. |
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Tyer is a modern variation that is now commonly accepted in our world of fast and loose phrasing and new vocabulary assimilation. |
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To fill gaps in recorded Manx vocabulary, revivalists have referred to modern Irish and Scottish Gaelic for words and inspiration. |
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Manx vocabulary is predominantly of Goidelic origin, derived from Old Irish and closely related to words in Irish and Scottish Gaelic. |
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Some Old Breton vocabulary remains in the present day as philosophical and scientific terms in Modern Breton. |
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During this period, De Niro developed a vocabulary of broad, telegraphic strokes and dragged applications of wet paint on wet underpainting. |
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Young children's phonological awareness and nonword repetition as a function of vocabulary development. |
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They understand the material, the process and are conversive in the potter's vocabulary of technique. |
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But, with the clock ticking on the Welsh Government's Budget and brows getting ever sweatier, the vocabulary is changing. |
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Friends in the United States have diverse worship styles and differences of theology, vocabulary, and practice. |
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Although of a similar format to the Scottish Psalter it contains metrical versions of the psalms with 21st century vocabulary and grammar. |
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In all cases, the vocabulary and format used in the letters is strictly defined. |
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Two important painters in the establishment of America's pop art vocabulary were Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg. |
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The Irish of Achill and Erris tends to differ from that of South Connacht in many aspects of vocabulary and, in some instances, of pronunciation. |
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Today most Scottish people speak Scottish English, which has some distinctive vocabulary and may be influenced to varying degrees by Scots. |
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Differences between the dialects make themselves felt in stress, intonation, vocabulary and structural features. |
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Benign neglect is one of those oxymorons, like Kenneth Galbraith's conventional wisdom, which is slipping into everyday vocabulary. |
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The term politically correct has been transformed into a mocking description of vocabulary or actions used to avoid race or gender bias. |
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Although Tamil dialects do not differ significantly in their vocabulary, there are a few exceptions. |
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In fact, many of the words for which Gerritsen suggests Dutch ancestry are reflexes of the most basic Pama-Nyungan vocabulary. |
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Apart from specialized vocabulary, Hindi is mutually intelligible with Standard Urdu, another recognized register of Hindustani. |
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When compared to monolinguals, multilingual children are slower in building up their vocabulary in every language. |
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My dear Angelina completed the predicate for me with a voluminous appendix, annotated through the agency of her incessive and florid vocabulary. |
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Terms such as tefillin, hortatory, neologism and parenesis are probably not part of most peoples' usual vocabulary. |
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The differences in dialect are marked in pronunciation and in some vocabulary but also in minor points of grammar. |
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Multiply that figure by 50 and you will have the approximate size of both your active and passive vocabulary. |
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You have to have discipline in the words you use, in your vocabulary. |
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Bilingual children and monolingual children have the same vocabulary size and gain the same vocabulary knowledge. |
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This means that while monolinguals may excel in vocabulary size for the one language they speak, their vocabulary content is not greater. |
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The tonal vocabulary of the timang in the musical transcription consists of five tones forming a pentatonic scale. |
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Vulgar Latin featured a large vocabulary of words that were productive in Romance. |
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Michael Schenker, of UFO, and Uli Jon Roth, who replaced Schenker in Scorpions, expanded the modal vocabulary available to guitarists. |
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Coffee, in the vocabulary of the place, may be called for in the shape of a demi-tasse, a capucin, or a mazagran. |
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To accompany these stories are photocopiable Teacher Notes with information on background, comprehension, vocabulary. |
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Latin also included vocabulary borrowed from Oscan, another Italic language. |
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He praised a spare, clean, and precise vocabulary for science and explanations that are as comprehensible as possible. |
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Apart from the irregular spelling, much of the vocabulary is recognisable to the modern reader. |
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Australia's switch to the metric system in the 1970s changed the country's vocabulary of measurement from imperial towards metric measures. |
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During his Swiss years, when he may have visited Italy, Holbein added an Italian element to his stylistic vocabulary. |
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Perhaps around 85 per cent of Old English words are no longer in use, but those that survived are basic elements of Modern English vocabulary. |
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Further, it is quite easy in a longer conversation to distinguish differences in vocabulary and pronunciation of some Urdu phonemes. |
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Save hifalutin vocabulary for other lawyers, if you must, and speak to the jurors in plain English, she recommends. |
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When that child learns to speak or sign, however, the child's active vocabulary begins to increase. |
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As with receptive vocabulary, however, there are many degrees at which a particular word may be considered part of an active vocabulary. |
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This simply indicates that a word gradually enters a person's vocabulary over a period of time as more aspects of word knowledge are learnt. |
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Words can be defined in various ways, and estimates of vocabulary size differ depending on the definition used. |
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Another definition often used in research of vocabulary size is that of word family. |
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Estimates of vocabulary size range from as high as 200 thousand to as low as 10 thousand, depending on the definition used. |
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A literate person's vocabulary is all the words he or she can recognize when reading. |
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This is generally the largest type of vocabulary simply because a reader tends to be exposed to more words by reading than by listening. |
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For example, the Nuer of Sudan have an elaborate vocabulary to describe cattle. |
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For native speakers of German average absolute vocabulary sizes range from 5,900 lemmas in first grade to 73,000 for adults. |
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Learning vocabulary is one of the first steps in learning a second language, but a learner never finishes vocabulary acquisition. |
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Whether in one's native language or a second language, the acquisition of new vocabulary is an ongoing process. |
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One useful method of building vocabulary in a second language is the keyword method. |
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Older students tend to rely less on creating word associations to remember vocabulary. |
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As a result word definitions in such dictionaries can be understood even by learners with a limited vocabulary. |
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Some consider this the origin of the ethnic group, the Cape Coloureds, who adopted various forms of speech utilising a Dutch vocabulary. |
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The glossary compiled by Jacob Poole provides most of what is known about Forth and Bargy vocabulary. |
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Hawaiian Creole English is a creole language most of whose vocabulary, but not grammar, is drawn from English. |
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Cypriot Arabic largely shows borrowing of vocabulary, and consequently Greek morphosyntax. |
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Creole languages, therefore, have a fully developed vocabulary and system of grammar. |
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The vocabulary, too, will develop to contain more and more items according to a rationale of lexical enrichment. |
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In fact, by the end of the period in which Middle English was spoken, as much as eighty percent of Old English vocabulary was no longer in use. |
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Hong Kong people also tend to speak Cantonese mixed with certain English vocabulary. |
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The written standards slightly differ in spelling and vocabulary, and are legally regulated. |
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Modern scientific vocabulary that borrows from Greek continues to use Latin transliteration conventions. |
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Prime examples of this are Aukan and Saramaccan, spoken in Suriname, which have vocabulary mainly from Portuguese, English and Dutch. |
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In India, Hindi and other native languages have been influenced by English, and loanwords from English are part of everyday vocabulary. |
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Others furthermore update the phrasing and vocabulary to contemporary Modern English. |
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The region's dialect owes much of its grammar and vocabulary to the Nordic influences of its conquerors. |
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It was expanded in 1987, but it still covered no more than half the actual vocabulary of Webster's Third. |
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English is a pluricentric language, with differences in pronunciation, vocabulary, spelling, etc. |
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New Caledonian French is influenced by Kanak languages in its vocabulary and grammatical structure. |
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There are differences in vocabulary and grammar, with the variety used in Finland remaining a little more conservative. |
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Nevertheless, there remains general homogeneity in phonetics, vocabulary, and phraseology between variants of the Indian English dialect. |
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The vocabulary, orthography, phonology, and semantics, are all thoroughly European. |
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They may also modify their vocabulary and grammar to be closer to those of Standard English for the same reason. |
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This procedure is meant to give Interlingua the most generally international vocabulary possible. |
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These terms, however, do not refer only to accent features but also to grammar and vocabulary, as explained in Received Pronunciation. |
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Speakers may also change their pronunciation and vocabulary, particularly towards Received Pronunciation and Standard English when in public. |
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Their pronunciation and vocabulary can be useful guides to the subtleties of speaking New York. |
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However, Virginia received more colonists from the English West Country, bringing with them a distinctive dialect and vocabulary. |
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The regional varieties of English can be distinguished in terms of vocabulary and phonology. |
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Regional variation in Australia consists primarily of differences in vocabulary rather than tone or accent. |
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Jamaican pronunciation and vocabulary are significantly different from English, despite heavy use of English words or derivatives. |
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Such are the vagaries of natural language and controlled vocabulary, both of which have their places in the business world. |
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Whilst clearly being a Northern English accent, it shares much vocabulary with Scots. |
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Many of these words are part of English core vocabulary, such as egg or knife. |
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Time forms, which we call sentic forms, form the vocabulary of our inherent language of emotion communication and generation. |
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The service employs the largest active vocabulary for business transactions over the telephone. |
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The vocabulary of social sciences is often incomprehensible to ordinary people. |
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The vocabulary of any language is influenced by contacts with other cultures. |
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Mutual intelligibility decreases in literary and specialized contexts that rely on educated vocabulary. |
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Documenting words from ABOULIA to ZYRIAN this book will fascinate you and help bring your vocabulary to life. |
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