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vocabulary and is
Jazz is the musical language of sex, the vocabulary of the orgasm ; ;
Lawrence Ferlenghetti and Bruce Lippincott have concentrated on writing a new poetry for reading with jazz that is very closely related to both the musical forms of jazz, and the vocabulary of the musician.
He mentions the beats only once '', when he refers to their having revived through mere power and abandonment and the unwillingness to, commit death in life some idea of a decent equivalent between verbal expression and actual experience,, but the entire narrative, is written in the tiresome vocabulary `` of '' that lost `` and '' dying cause, `` and in the '' `` sprung syntax that is supposed to supplant, our mother, tongue.
These differences in turn result from the fact that my Yokuts vocabularies were built up of terms selected mainly to insure unambiguity of English meaning between illiterate informants and myself, within a compact and uniform territorial area, but that Hoijer's vocabulary is based on Swadesh's second glottochronological list which aims at eliminating all items which might be culturally or geographically determined.
It is evident that Swadesh has not only had much experience with basic vocabulary in many languages but has acquired great tact and feeling for the expectable behavior of lexical items.
Clearly, an evaluation of a user's abilities and requirements is necessary to match a user with the most appropriate AAC method, input approach, and vocabulary.
An African influence is evident in music and dance, and is moulding the way in which Portuguese is spoken, but is almost disappearing from the vocabulary.
Related to this is lexicostatistics, which attempts to determine the degree of relation between a set of languages by comparing the percentage of basic vocabulary ( words like " I ", " you ", " heart ", " stone ", " two ", " be ", " and ") they share in common.
Distinctions in vocabulary persist, for example, in culinary terms, where communication with Germans is frequently difficult, and administrative and legal language, which is due to Austria's exclusion from the development of a German nation-state in the late 19th century and its manifold particular traditions.
It is a very traditional form of the language, probably derived from medieval deeds and documents, and has a very complicated structure and vocabulary which is generally reserved only for such documents.
In The Mysterious Affair at Styles, Poirot operates as a fairly conventional, clue-based detective, depending on logic, which is represented in his vocabulary by two common phrases: his use of " the little grey cells " and " order and method ".
The term argot is also used to refer to the informal specialized vocabulary from a particular field of study, hobby, job, sport, etc.
Amara seems to have been a Buddhist, and most of his work was destroyed, with the exception of what is the celebrated Amara-Kosha ( Treasury of Amara ), a vocabulary of Sanskrit roots, in three books, and hence sometimes called Trikanda or the " Tripartite ".
Although Afrikaans adopted words from languages such as Malay, Portuguese, the Bantu languages, and the Khoisan languages, an estimated 90 to 95 percent of Afrikaans vocabulary is ultimately of Dutch origin.
As in Classical architecture, in Gothic architecture, too, an aedicule or tabernacle frame is a structural framing device that gives importance to its contents, whether an inscribed plaque, a cult object, a bust or the like, by assuming the tectonic vocabulary of a little building that sets it apart from the wall against which it is placed.
Considerably more than one-third of the total vocabulary is alien from ordinary prose use.
A call is limited to a vocabulary of 38 words or phrases consisting of:
The origin of the term is uncertain, and many researchers have different theories on how the word entered the English vocabulary.

vocabulary and formed
With several languages being spoken in these plantations, a pidgin was formed, combining English vocabulary with grammatical structures typical of languages in the region.
Sentences come formed, but the medium can amend them with richer vocabulary or a better syntax before writing them down.
The speech of the Sussex characters is a parody of rural dialects ( in particular Sussex and West Country accents — another parody of novelists who use phonics to portray various accents and dialects ) and is sprinkled with fake but authentic-sounding local vocabulary such as mollocking ( Seth's favourite activity, undefined but invariably resulting in the pregnancy of a local maid ), sukebind ( a weed whose flowering in the Spring symbolises the quickening of sexual urges in man and beast ; the word is presumably formed by analogy to ' woodbine ' ( honeysuckle ) and bindweed ) and clettering ( an impractical method used by Adam for washing dishes, which involves scraping them with a dry twig or clettering stick ).
In Normandy, the new Norman language formed by the interaction of peoples, inherited vocabulary from Norse.
He brought teachers to his palaces, aiding the expansion of technical vocabulary, and formed the basis of the Lucknow gharana, emphasizing sensuous, expressive emotion.
These works also possess a number of characters uniquely formed to express features not found in the classical language as well as used some common characters used as phonetic loans ( see Chinese character classification ) to express other uniquely Wu vocabulary.
In addition to the linked complexes of blockhouses that formed the grand and petit ouvrages, the country around and between each position was provided with isolated blockhouses, observation points, shelters ( or abris ), outposts ( avants postes ) and batteries, using much the same vocabulary of rounded concrete forms as the primary line of fortifications.
* Linguistic reconstruction makes it possible to identify particular words ( those cited * thus on this page, with a preceding asterisk ) which are taken to have formed part of the vocabulary of the Proto-Indo-European language.
At this time slang language vocabulary was formed by inserting the infix-ok-after the first consonant of a word, and deleting the last syllable, creating a totally new word.
Grammatically it appears to be a partial relexification of Latin, that is, a language formed by substituting new vocabulary into an existing grammar.

vocabulary and by
They noted that there was little vocabulary shared by Turkic and Tungusic but not Mongolic.
Argots are mainly versions of other languages with a part of its vocabulary replaced by words unknown to the larger public.
In these sutras the perfection of the wisdom of not-self is stated to be the true self ; the ultimate goal of the path is then characterized using a range of positive language that had been used previously in Indian philosophy by essentialist philosophers, but which was now transmuted into a new Buddhist vocabulary to describe a being who has successfully completed the Buddhist path.
Ogden tried to simplify English while keeping it normal for native speakers, by specifying grammar restrictions and a controlled small vocabulary which makes an extensive use of paraphrasis.
His work is marked chiefly by an extraordinarily wide and ornate vocabulary, a cosmic perspective and a vein of sardonic and sometimes ribald humor.
" Meinhof did this in spite of earlier work by scholars such as Lepsius and Johnston demonstrating that the languages which he would later dub " Nilo-Hamitic " were in fact Nilotic languages with numerous similarities in vocabulary with other Nilotic languages.
It is marked by an extensive proliferation of specialist vocabulary, applying different names to the same feature in different animals.
In the course of the 14th century, it became a courtly fashion to extend the vocabulary, and by the 15th century, this tendency had reached exaggerated proportions.
is a novella which uses basic grammar and vocabulary in the first chapter and builds up to expert Esperanto by the end, including word lists so that beginners may easily follow along.
Eurythmy, developed by Rudolf Steiner and Marie Steiner-von Sivers, combines formal elements reminiscent of traditional dance with the new freer style, and introduced a complex new vocabulary to dance.
A dialect is distinguished by its vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation ( phonology, including prosody ).
Other speech varieties include: standard languages, which are standardized for public performance ( for example, a written standard ); jargons, which are characterized by differences in lexicon ( vocabulary ); slang ; patois ; pidgins or argots.
For the most part, the vocabulary, formulae, and calculations are not made any more difficult by the presence of more dimensions.
Instead, a popular theory suggests linguistic updating, which is when " late forms may not in fact have been original to the book but may reflect the updating of vocabulary and grammar by later scribes so their contemporaries could understand the book better.
Critics claim the vocabulary and style of the Pauline letters could not have been written by Paul according to available biographical information and reflect the views of the emerging Church rather than the apostle's.
Fictional languages are separated from artistic languages by both purpose and relative completion: a fictional language often has the least amount of grammar and vocabulary possible, and rarely extends beyond the absolutely necessary.
In some applications, especially in logic, the alphabet is also known as the vocabulary and words are known as formulas or sentences ; this breaks the letter / word metaphor and replaces it by a word / sentence metaphor.
Greek is a language distinguished by an extensive vocabulary.
* Minna von Barnhelm, edited with an introduction, German questions, notes and vocabulary, by Philip Schuyler Allen.
In the 13th century, the term " hobyn " was used, meaning " small horse or pony ", and by 1816 the derivative, " hobby ", had been introduced into the vocabulary of an unknown number of English people.
Luce, in Sense without Matter ( 1954 ), attempts to bring Berkeley up to date by modernising his vocabulary and putting the issues he faced in modern terms, and treats the Biblical account of matter and the psychology of perception and nature.

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