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- * English, for example, has only a few cases where tone is the only distinction. Languages like English have fairly '''fixed stress''', meaning that the position of the stress in ...6 KB (843 words) - 16:12, 29 April 2024
- ...{{word|seal|en}} and {{word|zeal|en}} will be heard as different words by English speakers even if they know neither, and that another language's phonology m ...2 KB (288 words) - 14:14, 17 October 2023
- In English (and presumably in many other languages), ...2 KB (343 words) - 00:26, 21 April 2024
- Perhaps the most common cases in English are shortened pronunciation of adjacent words such as in ''aren't'' and oth (while c'est is fairly comparable to the English pronoun-verb cases) ...7 KB (1,136 words) - 15:41, 4 March 2024
- POS tagger for English http://www.english.bham.ac.uk/staff/omason/software/qtag.html ...6 KB (810 words) - 00:46, 21 April 2024
- English phonetical rules are quite complex, as there are marked exceptions structur For example, an English letter p is [[aspirated]] (has a burst of air) when it is in a syllable [[o ...11 KB (1,639 words) - 16:13, 29 April 2024
- * In English -(e)s suffix as a plural marker is quite productive, where -en (children, o ...he German 'weltanschauung' and Portuguese 'saudade' are not lexicalized in English. ...9 KB (1,307 words) - 00:46, 21 April 2024
- For example, you may find that in some English documents ...3 KB (416 words) - 15:01, 21 August 2023
- For example, various strong [[verb]]s in english have alternative forms, like sing, sang and sung; there is no directly obv ...2 KB (333 words) - 16:27, 20 April 2024
- :: oR0C0L0 US english :: oR0C0L01 UK english ...8 KB (1,287 words) - 00:29, 21 April 2024
- ...e after the noun (ignoring [[institutionalized phrases]] for a moment). In English, adjectives that modify pronouns do this; consider 'She is someone useful.' ...3 KB (407 words) - 23:25, 21 April 2024
- Old English had the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorn_(letter) thorn character], þ, ...3 KB (454 words) - 23:07, 21 April 2024
- ...g [[whom]] - use of 'who' is now completely accepted in most any use. Most English speakers only use whom for its formal/archaic flavour, but most of us don't ...3 KB (433 words) - 14:15, 23 April 2024
- ...es (e.g. [[Interlingua]], [[Esparanto]], [[Ido]]), but languages such as [[English]] and [[French]] are also commonly used as auxiliary languages. * Modern English is SVO but allows OSV in [[subordinate clauses]], particularly as a poetic ...18 KB (2,726 words) - 23:26, 21 April 2024
- Say, bubble sort is an algorithm that, in english, goes something like ...3 KB (563 words) - 18:23, 26 February 2024
- ===English corpora and treebanks=== The International Computer Archive of Modern and Medieval English is a collection of various previously-existing corpora ...39 KB (5,657 words) - 16:02, 3 May 2024
- US versus UK English can also be argued about, since most of the language is the same, and most ...3 KB (512 words) - 23:32, 21 April 2024
- ...s part of words, such as english suffixes '-less' and '-ly.' (Note that in english, there is a free morpheme 'less' and a bound morheme in the suffix '-less') between English teachers and linguists, ...31 KB (4,780 words) - 00:47, 21 April 2024
- * German, (Anglo-)Frisian, English, Dutch, Yiddish, ...4 KB (566 words) - 10:23, 24 April 2024
- * In [[English]], the most major categories are probably: the [[noun]], the [[verb]], the In English you will probably see that ...40 KB (6,197 words) - 00:51, 21 April 2024