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ireland languages about morphems
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Here's a complete list of the inflectional morphemes of English, ... boy's boys' big bigger biggest sing sings singing sang sung Please tell me you're kidding. Why? What did I miss? Have you ever read C. C. Fries's *American
misc.education.language.english
by
peter t. daniels
3 yr 82 days ago
American English, Grammar, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Songs, Arts, Music, Languages, Morphemes
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OK, this looks as if my supposition was correct. What you want is English grammatical morphology in simple lists. There ... English (of course they are not as long since the whole business is simpler in English than in Spanish), e.g. Here's a
misc.education.language.english
by
peter t. daniels
3 yr 83 days ago
Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Careers, Business, Songs, Arts, Music, Languages, Morphology, Morphemes
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Me neither. If the saying is meaningful to those that ... who put forward explanations which (to me) don't stack up. Sorry, but this has me stumped. What would either of you make of "I really care" used sarcastically to mean
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
5 yr 156 days ago
Articles, Negatives, Constructions, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Usages, Australia, Languages, Apologies, Morphemes, Indefinite, Negations
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} It's common knowledge that Beyonce' invented the word "Bootylicious", } but did she in fact originate the entire "-licious" ... and Beyonce' respectively. Did they say they invented them? Or is that just where you
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... } When I first started typesetting in 1977, I had to check the hyphenation } of every word, just to be sure it was correct. When I encountered such } barbaric hyphenations as "bibliog-raphy" and "biog-raphy," I read up on }
alt.usage.english
by
r j valentine
5 yr 197 days ago
Pronunciation, Commas, Hyphenation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Punctuation, Plants, Languages, Morphemes
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As one who typesets many languages and thus has to ... based on *pronunciation*, not on *morphology* as in other languages, You are right in maintaining that English hyphenation is inconsistent. (However, only sometimes correct in terms of
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The maximum onsets principle isn't universally accepted. See http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/wells/syllabif.htm which describes the syllibification principles used for theLongman Pronunciation Dictionary. Thank you for your reply,Jonathan. But
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I've been sitting here trying to work out my pronunciation, ... saying "high for nation". Not the same thing at all. Jumping in at midstream and mid-arguments: As one who typesets many languages and thus has to hyphenate words, I
alt.usage.english
by
martin ambuhl
5 yr 199 days ago
Universities, Pronunciation, Hyphenation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Punctuation, Students, Schools, Languages, Morphemes
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I've been sitting here trying to work out my pronunciation, and I'm pretty sure that I break it as hy.phen.na.tion. ... pronounce it as hy.phe.na.tion, the result sounds as if I'm saying "high for nation". Not the same thing
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