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Some Related Sentences

Speakers and often
# Speakers of a creole's lexifier language often fail to understand, without learning the language, the grammar of a pidgin or creole.
* Speakers often have difficulty with the following phonemes, which may depend in some cases upon where in Vietnam they are originally from:
Speakers of some regional dialects or rural speakers often use the latter, shorter forms for both cases: " a házba vagyok " ( incorrect: I'm in ( to ) the house ).
These courses are often referred to as " ESOL with Citizenship " and lead to a nationally-accredited ESOL ( English for Speakers of Other Languages ) certificate.
Speakers were generally associated with the ministry, and often held other government offices.
Speakers of Cantonese often find it difficult to understand Taishanese.
Also in South India, Tamil and Malayalam Speakers are often able to understand each other and converse in their native languages to each other while understanding the bulk of the conversation.
Speakers of different Laz dialects have trouble understanding each other, and often prefer to communicate in the local official language.
Speakers were invited to address club members to inform them about different perspectives on important issues, after which in its early days the club membership often issued reports, statements, or recommendations on public policy issues.
Foreign Native English Speakers may quickly find a job teaching English, although foreigners should be aware of shady companies who often pull tricks on the employees.
Speakers often use them somewhat excessively, and sometimes combine several particles, as in doch mal, ja nun, or even ja doch nun mal.
Their views and goals have often been perceived as being at odds with, and offering an alternative to, the views and goals of Teachers of English to Speakers of Other LanguagesThey also persuade bilingual students to express their feelings in many ways, such as writing and artwork.
Speakers of Highland English, particularly those from areas which remain strongly Gaelic or have a more recent Gaelic speaking history, are often mistaken as being Irish by non-Highland Britons ; presumably as a result of the shared Gaelic influence upon the English of both areas.
Speakers of the Central and Tsamosan languages are often identified in ethnographic literature as " Coast Salish.
Speakers in conversation often do not use complete sentences or even complete words to converse.
Speakers of Malaysian Standard Malay in Peninsular Malaysia tend to speak at a more flowing pace, while words that end with the letter " a " often come out as a schwa (/ ə /).
Speakers of other forms of English often find it difficult to hear, especially the ' glottal ' forms that affect the pitch and duration and voice quality of surrounding words and sounds in subtle ways.
Speakers are often given a fictional brandname, sometimes intentionally similar to a well-regarded speaker manufacturer in order to mislead the buyer.
Speakers of Sri Lankan English are often incapable of producing certain sounds such as, and use the same sound for both and as they do not bite their lower lip for or round their lips for.

Speakers and make
* Speakers tend to confuse and both in perception and production, since the Japanese language does not make such a distinction.
After the election the Speaker and Deputy Speakers each make the following solemn affirmation before Parliament:
# economy: Speakers tend to make their utterances as efficient and effective as possible to reach communicative goals.
Speakers who do not control these differences make it very difficult for others to understand them.

Speakers and use
Speakers rarely create a verlan word on the fly ; rather, their ability to use and understand words from an accepted set of known verlan terms allows them to be identified as part of a verlan-speaking group.
Speakers which use these mechanical crossovers have some advantages in sound quality despite the difficulties of designing and manufacturing them, and despite the inevitable output limitations.
Speakers of Pittsburgh English are sometimes called " Yinzers ", in reference to their use of the 2nd-person plural pronoun " Yinz " The word " yinzer " is sometimes heard as pejorative, indicating a lack of sophistication, although the term is now used in a variety of ways.
: Further explanation: Speakers who use the instead of the sound round their lips and / or produce the vowel further towards the back of their mouths.
Unlike most popular music amplifiers and equipment, Leslie Speakers use an amphenol connector to interface directly to an organ.
Since the House of Commons is a very large body Speakers are rarely called upon to use the casting vote.
With this latest change in policy to allow the venue to be used freely as an outdoor demonstration site, coupled with the liberalisation on the use of sound amplification and the extension of operating hours of the venue, the Speakers ' Corner aims to address the genuine desire by some Singaporeans for lawful outdoor demonstrations and processions as a means of political expression.
Speakers and writers frequently do not consider it necessary to justify their positions on a particular use, taking it for granted that a given use is correct or incorrect.
Speakers also tend to use longer endings, which are not grammatically correct, to express even stronger form of familiarity or cuteness, for example " miminečíčko " ( very small and cute baby ), instead of correct " miminko " and " miminečko ".
Speakers of English use both variants, and it does not appear to significantly affect the sound of the consonants.
Speakers included Mr. Rami Tahbob, advisor to Al Quds ' File on Arab Affairs, who claimed that Israel was trying to control the Palestinian population through the use of " chemical drugs ," according to the Zayed Center website ; Michael Collins Piper, a Washington-based a political writer and conspiracy theorist ,, who claimed the Protocols of the Elders of Zion are " not a theory but a real fact ," that Israel is developing an ethnic bomb that will kill only Arabs.
Speakers of American English sometimes informally use the words jacket and coat interchangeably.
Speakers can use pitch accents on syllables to indicate what word ( s ) are in focus.
#* the principle of least effort: Speakers especially use economy in their articulation, which tends to result in phonetic reduction of speech forms.
His / her role is similar to that of Speakers elsewhere in other countries that use the Westminster system of government.
* English for Speakers of Other Languages, the use or study of English by speakers of other languages
" The English creation of save face as the opposite of lose face was arbitrary because lose has other antonyms: win, find, keep, catch, maintain, preserve, gain, and regain ", Carr ( 1993: 77 ) notes, " Speakers occasionally use the last three ( esp.

Speakers and if
Speakers of modern Swedish, Norwegian and Danish can mostly understand each other without studying their neighboring languages, particularly if speaking slowly.
Speakers with very wide, or rapidly increasing directivity at high frequencies, can give the impression that there is too much treble ( if the listener is on axis ) or too little ( if the listener is off axis ).
By convention, Speakers are normally addressed in Parliament as Mister Speaker, if a man, or Madam Speaker, if a woman.
The newly elected Speaker, by tradition, feigns reluctance as he or she is " dragged " to the chair in a practice dating from the days when British Speakers risked execution if the news they reported to the King was displeasing.
Speakers of languages and dialects without the sound sometimes have difficulty producing or distinguishing it from similar sounds, especially if they have had no chance to acquire it in childhood, and typically replace it with a voiceless alveolar fricative, voiceless dental stop, or a voiceless labiodental fricative ( known respectively as th-alveolarization, th-stopping, and th-fronting.
For a Canadian to hear that from a British Speaker is a pretty remarkable conclusion and assessment of your role as Speaker .” Baird predicted that Milliken would “ go down in history as, if not one of the best Speakers, the best Speaker the House of Commons has ever had .”
Speakers of other dialects hear these as if they were " b ", " d " and " g " respectively.

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