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Page "Australian English" ¶ 12
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Some Related Sentences

words and imported
Although Japanese is written using Chinese characters, and has historically imported many words of Chinese origin, the two languages are not considered to have a genealogical relationship.
Turkish literature during the Ottoman period, particularly Ottoman Divan poetry, was heavily influenced by Persian, including the adoption of poetic meters and a great quantity of imported words.
By banning the usage of imported words in the press, the association succeeded in removing several hundred foreign words from the language.
In 1984, Fabrizio De André published the LP Creuza de ma, in Genoese dialect ( an ancient dialect, with ancient and obsolete words, imported from Arabian, with linguistic difficulties among the same Genoese ).
In the modern world, happy endings have sometimes been viewed as an American specialty, and the fact that the English-language words happy ending ( or happy end ) have been imported as-is into other languages make this point.
The other two are native Korean words and foreign words imported from other languages, mostly from English.
: For a list of Irish words that have been imported into English and other languages, see the list of words of Irish origin at Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Changing endings in this manner is especially common, and can be frequently seen when foreign words are imported into any language.
English words are sometimes imported verbatim, and sometimes adapted to the importing language in a process similar to anglicisation.
Portuguese expressions and words are commonly imported into Riograndenser Hunsrückisch, particularly in reference to fauna and flora ( which are different from that of Germany ) and to technological innovations that did not exist when the original immigrants came to Brazil, leading to words like Aviong ( for airplane, instead of Flugzeug ), Kamiong ( truck ), Televisaum, etc.
New words have been imported for modern phenomena " le bike ", " le gas-cooker ".
Originally confined to the United States, the use of the words " fag " and " faggot " as epithets for gay men has spread elsewhere in the English-speaking world, but the extent to which they are used in this sense has varied outside the context of imported US popular culture.
Germanic leaders became the rulers of western Europe, and words from their languages were freely imported into the vocabulary of law.
In many cases, imported words can be found in print in both their accented and unaccented versions.
Sometimes diacritics are even added to imported words that originally didn't have any, often to distinguish them from common English words or to assist in proper pronunciation ; maté from Spanish mate and animé are examples of these.
Finally, the names for the Near Eastern domesticates imported into Egypt were not Sumerian or Proto-Semitic loan words, which further diminishes the likelihood of a mass immigrant colonization of lower Egypt during the transition to agriculture.
Grossmith then partnered with George Edwardes's former associate, Pat Malone, to produce a series of mostly adaptations of imported shows at the Winter Garden between 1920 and 1926: Sally ( 1921 ), The Cabaret Girl ( 1922, with book by Wodehouse and music by Jerome Kern, The Beauty Prize ( 1923, with Wodehouse and Kern ), a revival of Tonight's the Night ( 1923 ), Primrose ( 1924, with music by George Gershwin ), Tell Me More ( 1925, with words by Thompson and music by George Gershwin ) and Kid Boots ( 1926 with music by Harry Tierney ), many of them featuring Leslie Henson.
:( 3 ) For the purpose of proving the commission of any offense under this Act, the intention of the person charged at the time he did or attempted to do or made any preparation to do or conspired with any person to do any act or uttered any seditious words or printed, published, sold, offered for sale, distributed, reproduced or imported any publication or did any other thing shall be deemed to be irrelevant if in fact such act had, or would, if done, have had, or such words, publication or thing had a seditious tendency.

words and included
The initial availability of index words and electronic switches is determined by a table which is included in the Compiler Systems Tape.
This included the words of Afrosinia, who had turned state's evidence.
The Latter-day Saint Endowment prayer circle once included use of the words " Pay Lay Ale ", which some adherents believed were Adamic words meaning " Oh God, hear the words of my mouth ".
The form used in the Roman Rite included anointing of seven parts of the body while saying ( in Latin ): " Through this holy unction and His own most tender mercy may the Lord pardon thee whatever sins or faults thou hast committed deliquisti by sight hearing, smell, taste, touch, walking, carnal delectation ", the last phrase corresponding to the part of the body that was touched ; however, in the words of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia, " the unction of the loins is generally, if not universally, omitted in English-speaking countries, and it is of course everywhere forbidden in case of women ".
The Smartmodem included a small microcontroller that listened for key words in the data, allowing it to pick up the phone, dial numbers, and hang up again, all without any operator intervention.
For those with no religious affiliation and those who chose not to list an affiliation, either the space for religion was left blank or the words " NO PREFERENCE " or " NO RELIGIOUS PREF " were included.
Technical difficulties included the very high transistor counts needed to support the wide instruction words and the large caches.
Because the whole meaning of that phrase is much different from the meaning of words included alone, phraseology examines how and why such meanings come in everyday use, and what possibly are the laws governing these word combinations.
Some of the reasons for the failure of 100 words per minute HF RTTY included poor operation of improperly maintained mechanical teleprinters, narrow bandwidth terminal units, continued use of 170 Hz shift at 100 words per minute and excessive error rates due to multipath distortion and the nature of ionospheric propagation.
It was a system on how to analyze the Kokin Wakashū and included the secret ( or precisely lost ) meaning of words.
One brief Albany Journal paragraph on Martin Van Buren included the words " dangerous ," " demagogue ," " corrupt ," " degrade ," " pervert ," " prostitute ," " debauch " and " cursed.
Some verlan words, such as meuf, have become so commonplace that they have been included into the Petit Larousse and a doubly " verlanised " version was rendered necessary, so the singly verlanised meuf became feumeu ; similarly, the verlan word beur, derived from arabe, has become accepted into popular culture such that it has been re-verlanised to yield rebeu.
Scandinavian words that entered the English language included landing, score, beck, fellow, take, busting and steersman.
The vast majority of loan words did not appear in documents until the early 12th century ; these included many modern words which used sk-sounds, such as skirt, sky, and skin ; other words appearing in written sources at this time included again, awkward, birth, cake, dregs, fog, freckles, gasp, law, moss, neck, ransack, root, scowl, sister, seat, sly, smile, want, weak and window from Old Norse meaning " wind-eye ".
The Swedes claimed the section of land purchased included the land on the west side of the South River from just below the Schuylkill, in other words, today's Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, southeastern Pennsylvania, Delaware, and coastal Maryland.
The channels were 16 bits wide, and included 3 control bits and 4 for error correction, so the maximum transfer speed was 1 word per 100 ns, or 500 thousand words per second for the entire machine.

words and some
In the calm which follows the reading of a poem, for example, is the effect produced by the enforced quiet, by the musical quality of words and rhythm, by the sentiments or sense of the poem, by the associations with earlier readings, if it is familiar, by the boost to the self-esteem for the semi-literate, by the diversion of attention, by the sense of security in a legitimized withdrawal, by a kind license for some variety of fantasy life regarded as forbidden, or by half-conscious ideas about the magical power of words??
With contemporary English changing with the rapidity that marks this jet age, some of the words and phrases of the new version may themselves soon become archaic.
He tried to order the words of the three Union officers, seeking to create some coherent portrait of the dead boy.
In the urban area, in other words, they, unlike some urban ethnic groups, do not concentrate in ghetto colonies.
In their own words, it had aided them to get a clearer picture of how they had gotten into their marriages, and perhaps they had obtained some insights on why certain troubles appeared from time to time.
in working with these patients the therapist eventually gets to do some at least private mulling over of the possible meaning of a belch, or the passage of flatus, not only because he is reduced to this for lack of anything else to analyze, but also because he learns that even these animal-like sounds constitute forms of communication in which, from time to time, quite different things are being said, long before the patient can become sufficiently aware of these, as distinct feelings and concepts, to say them in words.
During that tournament alone, some 250,000 words winged their way out of Manchester.
In the early 1950's, Smith, together with his distinguished colleague, George Trager ( so austerely academic he sometimes fights his own evident charm ), and a third man with the engaging name of Birdwhistell ( Ray ), agreed on some basic premises about the three-part process that makes communication: ( 1 ) words or language ( 2 ) paralanguage, a set of phenomena including laughing, weeping, voice breaks, and `` tone '' of voice, and ( 3 ) kinesics, the technical name for gestures, facial expressions, and body shifts -- nodding or shaking the head, `` talking '' with one's hands, et cetera.
The phrase, `` emotional death '', interesting and, to a non-scientific mind, rather touching, suggests that this woman may have some flair for words, perhaps even something of the temperament regrettably called `` creative ''.
Most surprising of all, he has accomplished some prodigies in training for the production of words.
* A language may spell some words with unpronounced letters that exist for historical or other reasons.
Abbreviations have been used as long as phonetic scripts have existed, in some sense actually being more common in early literacy, where spelling out a whole word was often avoided, initial letters commonly being used to represent words in specific application.
The key words here are fair and eventually-if characters ' ranks are close, and the weaker character has obtained some advantage, then the weaker character can escape defeat or perhaps prevail.
William Camden provided a definition of " Anagrammatisme " as " a dissolution of a name truly written into his letters, as his elements, and a new connection of it by artificial transposition, without addition, subtraction or change of any letter, into different words, making some perfect sense applyable ( i. e., applicable ) to the person named.
" As for Chrotilda, in Gregory's words she died on the journey home " by some ill chance ".
In recent years, the words of the hymn have been changed in some religious publications to downplay a sense of imposed self-loathing by its singers.
For example, some words, such as " Kor " ( meaning " to hold "), are now pronounced with a terminal vowel sound, as in " Koro ".
Nevertheless it remains the case that, although spoken American and British English are generally mutually intelligible, there are enough differences to cause occasional misunderstandings or at times embarrassment — for example some words that are quite innocent in one dialect may be considered vulgar in the other.
In BrE, both irregular and regular forms are current, but for some words ( such as smelt and leapt ) there is a strong tendency towards the irregular forms, especially by users of Received Pronunciation.
Other words thought by some Latter-day Saints to derive from the Adamic language include deseret (" honey bee ", see Ether 2: 3 and Ahman (" God ").

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