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Page "International English" ¶ 13
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Some Related Sentences

Linguists and who
" Linguists study particular languages, such as English or Xhosa, by examining the utterances produced by the people who speak the language.
Linguists who understand particular languages as a composite of unique, individual idiolects must nonetheless account for the fact that members of large speech communities, and even speakers of different dialects of the same language, can understand one another.
Category: Linguists who died in Nazi concentration camps
Linguists who, due to this and similar facts, reject the Medieval origin of the Kensington inscription, consider this word to be a neologism and have noted that, in a Norwegian newspaper circulated in Minnesota, the late 19th century Norwegian historian Gustav Storm often used this term in articles on Viking exploration.
Linguists who reject Chomsky claim to be going beyond Chomsky, or they cling to phrase-structure grammars.
Linguists who studied English as spoken in California before and in the period immediately after World War II tended to find few if any distinct patterns unique to the region.

Linguists and have
Linguists have not always been more enlightened than `` practical people '' and sometimes have insisted on incredibly trivial points while neglecting things of much greater significance.
Linguists have had a hard time establishing the precise relationship of the Baltic languages to other languages in the Indo-European family.
Linguists have found that, while humans form sentences in ways apparently governed by very complex systems, they are remarkably unaware of the rules that govern their own speech.
Linguists tend to eschew this term, but historically some have reserved the term joual for the variant of Quebec French spoken in Montreal.
Linguists have an incomplete understanding of all aspects of the rules underlying natural languages, and these rules are therefore objects of study.
Linguists have reconstructed the word taniwha to Proto-Oceanic * tanifa, with the meaning " shark species ".
Linguists have approximated that the precursor to the language of the Huastecs diverged from the Proto-Mayan language between 2200 and 1200 BCE.
Linguists have been documenting Shelta since at least the 1870s, with the first works published in 1880 and 1882 by Charles Leland.
Linguists have made significant effort toward defining the difference between borrowing ( loanword usage ) and code-switching ; generally, borrowing occurs in the lexicon, while code-switching occurs at either the syntax level or the utterance-construction level.
Linguists have associated the word with the root / wel, as in / halískomai, " to be captured, to be made prisoner.
Linguists working on Tungusic have proposed a number of different classifications based on different criteria, including morphological, lexical, and phonological characteristics.
Linguists have reconstructed the term to Proto-Nuclear Polynesian * sawaiki.
Linguists have long classified Walloon as a dialect of French ( See langues d ' oïl ).
Linguists have documented locoism in use among English speakers by 1889, and both loco and locoweed in use by 1844.
Linguists have reconstructed about 100 Dacian words from placenames using established techniques of comparative linguistics, although only 20-25 such reconstructions had achieved wide acceptance by 1982.
Linguists have classified Maithili as one of the Indo-Aryan languages.
Linguists have traditionally considered Wyandot as a dialect or modern form of Wendat.
Linguists have provided evidence in:
Linguists such as Sergei Starostin have proposed a Dené – Caucasian macrofamily, which includes the North Caucasian languages together with Basque, Burushaski, Na-Dené, Sino-Tibetan, and Yeniseian.
Linguists have established firmly that the / h / is a reflex of a proto-Mayan */ h /.
Linguists have not thoroughly investigated the origin of the / N / phoneme, which occurs only in a few words.
Linguists have pointed out that the placement of the letters in the constructed word is in fact inconsistent with the claimed pronunciation, that the expected pronunciation in English is as in goatee.

Linguists and been
It has also been continuously developed by Linguists such as Kees Hengeveld.
Linguists such as Zaliznyak pointed out that certain linguistic elements in Slovo dated from the XV-XVI centuries, when the copy of the original manuscript ( or of a copy ) had been made.
Wallis is a Vice President of equal rights charity Parity, and has been elected a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Linguists ( FCIL ).
Linguists have been able to explain why it is so: Both Saurashtra and Gujarati branched off from a common parent, and have since taken completely different paths to modernity.
* Linguists have been drawing on his works as he studied languages as diverse as Ge ' ez, Amharic, Oromo, Swahili, Kamba, Mijikenda and Massai.
As of 2005, Ethnologue lists Taba as having a speaking population of approximately 20, 000, however, it has been argued by Linguists that this number could in reality be anywhere between 20, 000 and 50, 000.
Linguists have been interested in home sign for the insights it offers into the uniquely human ability to generate, acquire, and process language in general, and particularly as it pertains to such topics as the origins of language, notions of linguistic universals, the hypothesized critical period for language acquisition, children's natural tendency to invent language ( language acquisition device ), and the relationship between gesture and language.
Linguists have been investigating the dialects of Romani since the second half of the eighteenth century, and although there are no ancient written records of the language, it has been possible to reconstruct the development of Romani from the medieval languages of India to its present forms as spoken in Europe.

Linguists and field
The Linguists category is a listing of individuals working in or associated with the field of Linguistics.
Category: Linguists by field of research
Category: Linguists by field of research
Category: Linguists by field of research
Category: Linguists by field of research
Category: Linguists by field of research
Category: Linguists by field of research
Category: Linguists by field of research
Category: Linguists by field of research
Category: Linguists by field of research
Category: Linguists by field of research

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