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Some Related Sentences

For and speakers
" For most Swahili speakers, the use of satire in writing is unfamiliar.
For instance, a local society in the middle of a large city may have regular meetings with speakers, focusing less on observing the night sky if the membership is less able to observe due to factors such as light pollution.
For most speakers ( even native speakers ), this form of the language is generally difficult to understand, as it contains many highly specialised terms for diplomatic, internal, official, and military matters.
For a few illustrative examples: German speakers use " Wasserstoff " ( water substance ) for " hydrogen ", " Sauerstoff " ( acid substance ) for " oxygen " and " Stickstoff " ( smothering substance ) for " nitrogen ", while English and some romance languages use " sodium " for " natrium " and " potassium " for " kalium ", and the French, Italians, Greeks, Portuguese and Poles prefer " azote / azot / azoto " ( from roots meaning " no life ") for " nitrogen ".
For both these languages, however, revitalization movements have led to the adoption of these languages by adults and children and produced some native speakers.
For example, a continuous chain of speakers across the centuries links Vulgar Latin to all of its modern descendants.
For example, the previous emperor is usually called Hirohito in English, although he was never referred to as Hirohito in Japan, and was renamed Shōwa Tennō after his death, which is the only name that Japanese speakers currently use when referring to him.
For this reason, the language came to be known as the Hittite language, even though that was not what its speakers had called it.
For complex discussions and business / technical situations, English is not an adequate communication tool for non-native speakers of the language.
For example, English speakers recognize that the words dog and dogs are closely related — differentiated only by the plurality morpheme "- s ", which is only found bound to nouns, and is never separate.
For example, hearing the difference between bad and bed is easy for native English speakers.
For many older Victorian speakers, the words " celery " and " salary " also sound the same but instead both sound like " celery ".
For English speakers, it is this sense of the term that is most often encountered, since it appears frequently in biographical writing about composers who worked in German-speaking countries.
For example, if a listener's main speakers are usable down to 80 Hz, then the subwoofer filter can be set so the subwoofer only works below 80.
For instance, some floor standing tower speakers include a subwoofer driver in the lower portion of the same cabinet.
For many speakers, Canadian raising is not stopped just by any voiced consonants ; rather, only voiced consonants that come right before a morpheme boundary stop it.
There are many other dialect-specific complexities: For example, even the speakers just described, for whom " rider " and " spider " do not rhyme, may differ on whether raising applies in " hydrogen ", although unquestionably it does apply to " nitrogen ".
For English speakers, it may suggest that the dreamer must recognize that there is " more than one way to skin a cat ," or in other words, more than one way to do something.
For instance, targets for the training of te reo teachers must be met, education curricula involving te reo must be approved, and public bodies in districts with a sufficient number and / or proportion of te reo speakers and schools with a certain proportion of Māori students must submit Māori language plans for approval.
For older speakers, long vowels tend to be more peripheral and short vowels more centralised, especially with the low vowel, which is long but short.
For younger speakers, they are both.
For older speakers, / u / is only fronted after / t /; elsewhere it is.
For younger speakers, it is fronted everywhere, as with the corresponding phoneme in New Zealand English.
For instance, the Portuguese-derived word ezemplu " example " is pronounced by some speakers, and conversely Janeiru " January " is pronounced.

For and English
For a particularly fabulous room which houses a collection of fine English Chippendale furniture, fabric wall panels were embroidered with a typically Chinese-inspired design of this revered Eighteenth Century period.
For example, out of the social evils of the English industrial revolution came the novels of Charles Dickens ; ;
For example, when the film is only four minutes old, Neitzbohr refers to a small, Victorian piano stool as `` Wilhelmina '', and we are thereupon subjected to a flashback that informs us that this very piano stool was once used by an epileptic governess whose name, of course, was Doris ( the English equivalent, when passed through middle-Gaelic derivations, of Wilhelmina ).
For English the reduction in size is less striking.
For example, a writer in a recent number of The Queen hyperbolically states that `` of the myriad imprecations the only one which the English Catholics really resent is the suggestion that they are ' un-English ' ''.
For example, the spelling of the Thai word for " beer " retains a letter for the final consonant " r " present in the English word it was borrowed from, but silences it.
For English, this is partly because the Great Vowel Shift occurred after the orthography was established, and because English has acquired a large number of loanwords at different times, retaining their original spelling at varying levels.
For the first time, the tactic of using two express bowlers in tandem paid off as Jack Gregory and Ted McDonald crippled the English batting on a regular basis.
For example, there are more than six signs for birthday in ASL, just as in English one can say couch and sofa, or soda and pop, to mean the same thing.
For example, the word " Amerika " in German has a one-to-one equivalence to its meaning in modern English: it may denote North America, South America, or both, and in some instances refers to the United States only.
For the country there is the term Usono, cognate with the English word Usonia later popularized by Frank Lloyd Wright.
For example, in English, a past tense morpheme is-ed.
For example, ( as in pin ) and ( as in spin ) are allophones for the phoneme in the English language.
For example, as in pin and as in spin are allophones for the phoneme in the English language because they cannot distinguish words ( in fact, they occur in complementary distribution ).
For a Mandarin speaker, to whom and are separate phonemes, the English distinction is much more obvious than it is to the English speaker who has learned since childhood to ignore it.
For example, English has both oral and nasal allophones of its vowels.
For instance member nations of the Commonwealth where English is not spoken natively, such as India, often closely follow British English forms, while many American English usages are followed in other countries which have been historically influenced by the United States, such as the Philippines.
For the most part American vocabulary, phonology and syntax are used, to various extents, in Canada ; therefore many prefer to refer to North American English rather than American English.
Professor Henry Higgins sings, " Look at her, a prisoner of the gutters / Condemned by every syllable she utters / By right she should be taken out and hung / For the cold-blooded murder of the English tongue.
For a compilation album of the Glenmark duo Gemini, Andersson had Björn Ulvaeus write new Swedish lyrics for the re-recording of two old songs ; Ulvaeus also wrote new English lyrics to older Swedish language songs for opera singer Anne Sofie von Otter tribute album " I Let The Music Speak ".

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