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  • |name = New Balaybalan '''New Balaybalan''' (Turkish: Bâleybelen or Yeni Bâleybelen), also transcribed
    7 KB (1,087 words) - 07:52, 23 October 2023
  • '''New Urban Sowaár''' is an emergent variety of Sowaár spoken by urban middle-c ...inguistic change, a version of this "gynelect" is on its way to becoming a new, non-posh standard for Sowaár.
    2 KB (269 words) - 14:03, 2 May 2023
  • 24 bytes (3 words) - 11:48, 8 October 2018
  • ...War of Reclamation]]. Years before this are referred to as '''Before the New Imperial Age''' ({{Smallcaps|bnia}}). The name refers to [[S'entin]] and [ ==Timeline of events in the New Imperial Age count==
    2 KB (278 words) - 10:31, 2 August 2019

Page text matches

  • ...War of Reclamation]]. Years before this are referred to as '''Before the New Imperial Age''' ({{Smallcaps|bnia}}). The name refers to [[S'entin]] and [ ==Timeline of events in the New Imperial Age count==
    2 KB (278 words) - 10:31, 2 August 2019
  • buttonlabel=Create new article
    102 bytes (13 words) - 14:59, 14 July 2018
  • ...Middle Anatolian languages are a family of constructed languages that are New Balaybalan. * [[New Balaybalan]]
    685 bytes (81 words) - 13:03, 4 June 2017
  • '''New Urban Sowaár''' is an emergent variety of Sowaár spoken by urban middle-c ...inguistic change, a version of this "gynelect" is on its way to becoming a new, non-posh standard for Sowaár.
    2 KB (269 words) - 14:03, 2 May 2023
  • | data2 = {{Smallcaps|1[[New Imperial Age|nia]]—present}} | label7 = <small>83[[New Imperial Age|NIA]]</small>
    2 KB (282 words) - 10:09, 1 August 2019
  • ...uences from several of Tolkien's own languages, but due to diachronics and new roots having been added, amman iar is very unique.
    1 KB (163 words) - 00:26, 14 February 2021
  • ...veloped system of derivational morphology along with compounding to create new words, meaning that borrowing words is not necessary, but it still happens,
    3 KB (383 words) - 20:09, 9 March 2023
  • ==New Urban==
    2 KB (328 words) - 14:03, 2 May 2023
  • | date = 83<small>[[New Imperial Age|NIA]]</small>
    787 bytes (92 words) - 21:52, 9 September 2019
  • ...inction: ''s vati nyvier'' "the new car" vs ''s vati ie nyvo'' "the car is new", somewhat like in German.
    2 KB (332 words) - 22:54, 10 August 2022
  • ...can be used by linguists and language creators alike to analyze and create new languages. ...s is also a valuable tool for language creators, or conlangers, who design new languages. By establishing a set of phonotactic rules, conlangers can creat
    3 KB (439 words) - 21:15, 9 May 2023
  • ...heir world "Teraa" after a series of asteroid collisions, hoping to find a new world for the 1.2 million colonists to rebuild their civilization. The "Ter ...ntense language and cultural instruction, after which they travel to their new homes in the Eastern Sector. When the colony ship's nuclear reactors show s
    5 KB (796 words) - 02:40, 4 May 2015
  • ...ther to express an underlying philosophy or to make it easier to recognize new vocabulary. These are also known as [[Philosophical language|philosophical]
    1 KB (179 words) - 00:05, 6 February 2021
  • ...ang and add information so that the next person can decipher it and make a new translation. You will have '''48''' hours from the time of having received ...e: Take a look who's next after you and go to their talk page and create a new topic called "{{PAGENAME}}"; and link the page where you keep your translat
    3 KB (532 words) - 22:27, 25 March 2024
  • ...ang and add information so that the next person can decipher it and make a new translation. You will have '''48''' hours from the time of having received ...e: Take a look who's next after you and go to their talk page and create a new topic called "Sixth Linguifex Relay"; and link the page where you keep your
    3 KB (527 words) - 00:36, 30 August 2018
  • ...ang and add information so that the next person can decipher it and make a new translation. You will have '''48''' hours from the time of having received ...e: Take a look who's next after you and go to their talk page and create a new topic called "Fourth Linguifex Relay"; and link the page where you keep you
    3 KB (561 words) - 17:56, 24 July 2015
  • ...re many online communities from YouTube to Reddit to Discord that generate new Anglish works on a regular basis.
    4 KB (606 words) - 18:24, 28 January 2023
  • ...the [[Iscaria|Iscarian region]] in the 3rd and 4th millennia {{Smallcaps|[[New Imperial Age|bnia]]}}. The best known member of this group is [[Aeranir]], ...ranid languages]] around the beginning of the 1st millennium {{Smallcaps|[[New Imperial Age|bnia]]}}. However, as a written languages, it remained in use
    4 KB (478 words) - 16:38, 28 September 2019
  • ...ang and add information so that the next person can decipher it and make a new translation. You will have '''48''' hours from the time of having received ...e: Take a look who's next after you and go to their talk page and create a new topic called "Fifth Linguifex Relay"; and link the page where you keep your
    4 KB (596 words) - 00:26, 5 December 2017
  • ** New ''s'' also develops after final ''l, n, r''. ** medially, giving rise to new long vowels and diphthongs:
    6 KB (935 words) - 10:33, 8 July 2021
  • :::: ''New Gánəmannic'' † :::::: ''New Angáttic'' †
    8 KB (1,380 words) - 15:35, 8 January 2020
  • Avtiárve = (f) New Zealand; avtiárevsьk (adj) thá karie = sorrow (Connecticut), care (New York)
    13 KB (2,072 words) - 07:26, 1 April 2024
  • ...reathy-voiced consonants; “aspiration” appears to have been lost producing new voiced stops; a development which seems to have appeared after von Walden's One relatively strange change is the change of this new /d/ to /l/ at the beginning of words.
    4 KB (562 words) - 05:12, 23 May 2017
  • ...se:Chlouvānem Inquisition|Chlouvānem]] diocese of Kēhamijāṇa; the Union of New Ézélonía; and the inhabited parts of the Lalla Pūrjayuñca. There are, ...oken along the Embranas river (NE Inquisition) and in present-day southern New Ézélonía;
    8 KB (1,238 words) - 09:17, 11 November 2023
  • ...excavation that had started 14 May 2031. This date is now better known as New Year's Day, 0 Other Earth. ...s into colonising Other Earth. An advisory body was tasked with creating a new international language for the colony, the result being Matsu.
    3 KB (366 words) - 12:28, 6 July 2021
  • *Șa tsuar thbam = Happy new year
    1 KB (254 words) - 14:37, 24 January 2022
  • ...he British Crown to settle 100 families of German Palatines in the town of New Bern on the Neuse and Trent Rivers in 1710. The colony flourished and prosp
    2 KB (254 words) - 12:49, 13 March 2024
  • |name = New Balaybalan '''New Balaybalan''' (Turkish: Bâleybelen or Yeni Bâleybelen), also transcribed
    7 KB (1,087 words) - 07:52, 23 October 2023
  • ...Mountain Manish, and ultimately the dialect spoken there developed into a new language, known as [[Aiden]].
    2 KB (330 words) - 03:26, 4 March 2020
  • |name = The New Dutch The New Dutch is conlang that is based on [[Wikipedia:Dutch_language|Dutch]], [[Wik
    6 KB (758 words) - 10:17, 10 October 2023
  • If you want to say "my" or "your", a "da" is added to the pronoun, and the new form is added onto a word. Example: <br/>
    2 KB (324 words) - 14:45, 8 February 2021
  • ...eted (including the alphabet) and a new version was made from scratch. The new language did not use its own alphabet. It relied on the Latin alphabet (so === New-Jeïos ===
    14 KB (2,366 words) - 16:14, 6 July 2021
  • ...anic languages, the preposition comes first, then the verb infinitive. The new prepositional verb adopts the conjugation paradigm (-va, -nés, or irregula
    2 KB (306 words) - 21:13, 10 July 2015
  • ...tes on [[w:Eurovision|Eurovision]] Fan Forums it was even proposed to be a new language for [[w:singing|singing]] , [[w:joiking|joiking]] and [[w:rapping| Rhything is the main feature of getting new words. 1500 new word idea's. Does not say that there are indeed words. Have made. Now the p
    11 KB (1,645 words) - 16:47, 6 July 2021
  • |new=
    2 KB (244 words) - 10:59, 11 November 2023
  • |53||new
    2 KB (263 words) - 00:26, 7 September 2018
  • <!-- Leave the "New arrival" template alone, it works automatically--> <!-- If you are new to conlanging it is recommended that you visit EmperorZelos' blog page on t
    7 KB (912 words) - 11:58, 15 November 2018
  • ...phen Mimh (2000) ''Utopian rulers and spoofs stake out territory online''. New York Times, May 25, 2000</ref><ref name=nytimes2005>Roberta Smith, ...ntly republished elsewhere, drew his website to popular attention. Several new "citizens" joined Talossa as a result, and Madison began to claim that he w
    11 KB (1,478 words) - 15:57, 28 April 2021
  • |'''th'''ink ([[w:New York City English|New York]])
    6 KB (755 words) - 17:10, 8 March 2024
  • |new=
    2 KB (266 words) - 23:19, 17 October 2023
  • ...tion is an attempt to consolidate previous versions of the language with a new and better balanced phonology, and discard features outside its scope. In-u * U-Fronting / U-Ü Merger (/u:/ and new diphthongs containing /u/ have this element centralised to /ü/)
    8 KB (1,128 words) - 09:43, 20 January 2017
  • ...obites had been pardoned provided they agreed to an oath of loyalty to the new monarchs William and Mary, Whitty had spent the war raiding English shippin ...f of Southwest England that had been damaged by a storm. They sailed their new ship to Bristol, where they repaired her, restocked their supplies, filled
    8 KB (1,380 words) - 02:43, 20 February 2021
  • ...claim that she had to create a translation of the Book of Light and even a new script "for those living in the darkness; poor natives to whom, alas, our b ...ars later by Teke Kále. Much later, in the seventh era 290, the founder of New Khat Empire, Sekkute I, used the script as a national romantic example of p
    6 KB (893 words) - 19:14, 15 July 2015
  • ...of rebracketing of the Proto-Ash relational case suffix {{ash|*-n}}. While new constructions developed for locatives in general, this fossilised affix nar ...reduces some diphthongs from Early Modern Ash to monophthongs but creates new ones by eliding intervocalic consonants.
    6 KB (918 words) - 16:23, 4 August 2023
  • ...ould be adopted in the partitioned United States, Canada, U.K., Australia, New Zealand, and places with various Creoles would be left to the individual re ...ut perhaps the descendants of German immigrants in America, Australia, and New Zealand will choose Folksprak. 'best not to work out the kinks in a rocky
    10 KB (1,320 words) - 22:38, 22 December 2018
  • ...ps would eventually meet again and new cultures combining the old with the new would develop. Additionally there were important clusters that developed into new consonants in the descendants and may have been single phonemes already in
    10 KB (1,538 words) - 12:57, 8 August 2023
  • ...eat, Sævíùs isolated themselves from all outside influence. As a result, a new dialect of Níevzi was born. :*'''Lod''' /'lod/ - Lod literally translates to "new", since this dialect is newer than the original second-generation. This is
    11 KB (1,754 words) - 21:49, 4 July 2021
  • ...0 years of direct contact (c. 480 BC), the Greeks were integrated into the new Iberian state, though the contact with [[w:Massalia|Massalia]] was kept and With the new concepts adopted from the Greeks, the Iberians seeked to expand westwards t
    5 KB (810 words) - 23:12, 17 November 2023
  • | data2 = {{Smallcaps|2104[[New Imperial Age|bnia]]—1266[[New Imperial Age|bnia]]}} | label7 = <small>1530 [[New Imperial Age|BNIA]]</small>
    20 KB (3,128 words) - 13:13, 1 December 2019
  • ...maic, headed east, took on new forms in India, and spread, with continuing new forms, through most of mainland Southeast Asia (minus Vietnam) and the full
    8 KB (1,153 words) - 00:28, 31 March 2024
  • Times New Roman is consistently head-final. [[Category:Times New Roman]][[Category:Hussmauch]][[Category:Languages]]
    5 KB (772 words) - 16:22, 17 March 2022
  • ...eir old traditions. Fishing and trade are also very important for them, as new technologies quickly entered their culture and were incorporated into it. ...t very easily and are prone to many cardiovascular diseases. This and also new infections, introduced by the colonists, severely decreased the number of t
    6 KB (884 words) - 09:34, 30 July 2019
  • ...final nasals ''-n'', ''-m'' with nasalisation or preceding vowel, creating new ''ą, ę, į, ų, ɚ'' and ''ąą, ęę, įį, ųų'' * lowering of ''u(u)'' > new vowel ''o(o)'' before ''a(a), ä(ä), ą(ą)'' in the next syllable: ''kuka
    7 KB (1,050 words) - 11:41, 19 February 2024
  • ...opion in that region), with notable examples including Australia, England, New Zealand and South Africa. In addition to the vowel shifts, some somewhat mo ...specially visible in the British Commonwealth countries like Australia and New Zealand, combined with historical precedent in English language history.
    5 KB (773 words) - 18:29, 5 July 2021
  • <!-- CREATE A NEW LANGUAGE --> preload=Template:New/Language
    9 KB (1,343 words) - 08:17, 15 June 2021
  • As the Folk Nation's population began to grow, the influx of new speakers of the Soft Language led to a lot of changes to occur in the spoke ...nting the full range of sounds in Folk's Tongue. This script is still very new, but there will be some other pages describing the other writing systems of
    7 KB (1,197 words) - 14:14, 8 February 2021
  • ...ds that are easy for most learners to pronounce. In the process of forming new words, an ending cannot always be added without a modification of some kind
    3 KB (386 words) - 22:48, 11 July 2020
  • Uuskiel /uuskiel/ (literally "New language") is a finnic is conlang created by Nico Kaikkonen aka Nico Fors.
    3 KB (411 words) - 18:57, 21 April 2020
  • With the creation of the Oares Empire, the Ejalan language became the new lingua franca in the East, while the Virjan language had (and still has) a ...*ai could have already been monophthongs in Kvetain). It also developed a new phoneme *ǫ of an unknown quality, which did not survive in any modern lang
    12 KB (1,931 words) - 18:00, 22 April 2022
  • ...nkwi are encouraged in this way to come up with new aesthetically pleasing new words and terms, being considered both an artistic practice as well as a le
    8 KB (1,198 words) - 00:16, 23 March 2023
  • ...North-Eastern dialects, which were the most widely spoken back then. This new orthography was similar to the Latvian one having diacritics instead of dig ...s new Pomorian Proper is a mixture of Western and Eastern dialects and the new orthography is a compromise variant between the traditional and Eastern sys
    11 KB (1,815 words) - 13:26, 22 August 2017
  • ...have gender. One such explanation is that it gives an easy method to make new words from existing ones, example includes Spanish ''médico'' for doctor,
    3 KB (543 words) - 21:37, 17 October 2023
  • '''Tba''' is an L-Austronesian language spoken in the island of New Hercynia in [[Lõis]]'s Southeast Asia. It's inspired by Estonian, and is m
    2 KB (376 words) - 14:02, 5 December 2019
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] || {{term|}}
    10 KB (1,113 words) - 16:25, 3 February 2024
  • |new=
    2 KB (379 words) - 18:05, 4 March 2024
  • ...lace from the retroflex series of consonants, to the alveolar series, to a new dental series. * In verbs and gerunds, word-initial */β/ became a new /w/.
    14 KB (2,028 words) - 15:05, 8 February 2021
  • ...nological change. However, vowel reduction and devoicing has resulted in a new set of pseudo-clusters emerging in normal speech for many speakers, much li
    3 KB (492 words) - 01:06, 17 October 2019
  • ...me retroflex ''*š'' after ''*r, *u, *k or *i''. In Eastern Carpathian this new ''š'' reverted back to ''s'' before plosive consonants (in some southern d ...l ''*m'' changed to ''n''. Final resonants were preserved by addition of a new ending: PIE ''*péh₂wr̥'' “wheat” > ''*púhr-an'' > Car. ''pūrha''
    19 KB (2,896 words) - 13:42, 22 February 2023
  • # new # new
    7 KB (982 words) - 23:13, 15 February 2021
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] ||
    9 KB (980 words) - 11:54, 29 September 2023
  • ...iliary Language for all kinds of people around the world, giving to them a new way to connect to each other. Nowadays, Tenok has being developing to be mo
    3 KB (426 words) - 22:24, 16 April 2022
  • ...e letters, notably circumflex vowels(âêîôû) and the cedilla h(ḫ), with the new letters phonetically representing high tone and vowels and the voiceless pa ...rding to Man of Long Speeches(''Ḫawayûkkabân'').</ref> Later on in life, a new name would be assigned to the person based on the person's achievements, me
    10 KB (1,463 words) - 13:59, 8 May 2024
  • |53||new
    4 KB (396 words) - 16:53, 9 August 2022
  • ...od, and thus when the Meiji era began the vassals were integrated into the new Japanese state, though many kingdoms still stayed independent in the north Meanwhile, the new Japanese government had begun co-operating with the dormant Prosperity Part
    8 KB (1,148 words) - 15:03, 20 March 2024
  • ...phasis such as in the sentence «You, I love». In the case of Castithan the new emphasized word would have to go with the topic marking particle ''ksa'':
    4 KB (512 words) - 14:16, 15 November 2016
  • |'''Merging and affricatization of PCC */x/, */g/''' into a new consonant, */ǯ/ [d͡ʒ] — *ča čenta "home world" > *ǯaǯenta > ''zaze |'''Lenition of the velar plosive */k/''' to a new consonant, */x/ [x] (probably [h] in some environments) — *ʼnakis "streng
    11 KB (1,628 words) - 15:22, 12 September 2022
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] || {{term|sjit}}
    11 KB (1,218 words) - 11:57, 29 January 2024
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] ||
    9 KB (1,039 words) - 02:51, 25 May 2023
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] || {{term|-ëgw-}}
    11 KB (1,291 words) - 02:13, 19 March 2024
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] ||
    10 KB (1,071 words) - 14:53, 6 April 2023
  • <!-- Leave the "New arrival" template alone, it works automatically--> <!-- If you are new to conlanging it is recommended that you visit EmperorZelos' blog page on t
    12 KB (1,492 words) - 05:39, 20 January 2017
  • new: nów
    3 KB (524 words) - 02:05, 25 August 2016
  • new
    4 KB (655 words) - 18:17, 30 July 2018
  • <tr><th>183</th><th>[[wiktionary:new|new]]</th><td> </td></tr>
    14 KB (2,531 words) - 12:11, 17 November 2022
  • ...ld character form", and the simplified forms are called 新字形 = síndzúhen = "new character form". ...be read with either hon or ma reading, with both correct, for example 鐵道 (new form: 鉄道), "railway", for which both the Hon reading, "teddó", and the
    14 KB (2,134 words) - 22:57, 15 October 2023
  • *''A fawl serñ slawb'' = Happy New Year! *''Aodéaroa'' = New Zealand
    7 KB (1,045 words) - 23:14, 18 June 2023
  • *It is common for Sceptrian to [[Sceptrian#Derivational_Morphology|derive]] new nouns from verbs already derived from nouns
    3 KB (487 words) - 13:34, 9 July 2015
  • ...e in the second position in a sentence. Word order is relatively free with new information tending towards the front of the utterance.
    4 KB (682 words) - 01:21, 28 May 2017
  • ...language from the old version, it has since then taken an almost entirely new form. Most of the vocabulary has been changed, as well as several changes i
    5 KB (676 words) - 15:30, 6 July 2021
  • ...Nepokians mingle with (Proto-)Polynesian tribes and adopt words from their new neighbors. However, there are hardly any words from Nepokian in Polynesian ====New Nepokian====
    27 KB (3,791 words) - 15:21, 6 July 2021
  • |setting = New South Wales, Australia
    4 KB (482 words) - 01:41, 9 March 2024
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] || {{term|ной}}
    12 KB (1,129 words) - 21:13, 22 March 2024
  • *Non-configurational (new news before the verb (often definite), old news after the verb (often indef *Non-configurational (new news before the verb (often definite)?, old news after the verb (often inde
    9 KB (1,283 words) - 14:39, 20 July 2021
  • new: niú
    3 KB (589 words) - 03:12, 6 September 2021
  • ...oicelessness when pulled out of consonant clusters, thus cementing them as new phonemes. ...ied the robust case system of Proto-Indo-European, Pre-Owina innovated two new cases under influence from nearby Siberian languages:
    10 KB (1,447 words) - 14:08, 4 December 2019
  • New zero-grade is widely present in verbs: *Forming new intransitive verbs from transitive verbs with full grade vowels: '''''ū'''
    10 KB (1,467 words) - 19:05, 17 February 2023
  • ...this list, see who's next after you and go onto their talk page. Create a new topic called "First Linguifex Relay"; use the template ''<nowiki>{{subst:ta
    5 KB (784 words) - 21:14, 30 July 2015
  • new: niú
    3 KB (645 words) - 16:28, 22 February 2024
  • new: niú
    4 KB (707 words) - 20:20, 20 August 2018
  • *''mala'' = new
    4 KB (658 words) - 00:22, 11 November 2021
  • ...he outcome of these consonants in different branches. Both traditional and new theories are represented in tables below: |+ New theory
    16 KB (2,368 words) - 18:57, 14 April 2022
  • ...anguages, the Qinghai sprachbund, the Celtic languages, and others. Papua New Guinea seems to have naturally created a creole to meet this exact kind of ...sh to its Germanic roots, the U.S.A.'s hidden divisions become clear and a new era of communication becomes possible, across Northern Europe, and the worl
    14 KB (1,885 words) - 14:50, 9 July 2022
  • It is quite easy to create new verbs: any noun or stem can be turned into a verb by adding the appropriate There are several semantically-restricted options for creating a new noun from a verb.
    9 KB (1,338 words) - 20:53, 24 January 2017
  • <tr><th>183</th><th>[[wiktionary:new|new]]</th><td>νεύος, -α, -ο</td></tr>
    16 KB (2,488 words) - 15:01, 13 September 2022
  • ...cestor approximately 2 000 years ago and still remain in contact, allowing new words entering easily. Yrkyr also underwent a slight Mtari influence by the ...and /u/ respectively, but these features are not phonemic anymore. Instead new consonant alterations derived from the change.
    31 KB (4,724 words) - 18:27, 23 December 2020
  • ...was understood that the changes effectively resulted in the creation of a new language, which was named “Idiom Neutral” (which means “the neutral i ...u Universal'' in 1898 and the circulars of the Academy were written in the new language from that year. Those who continued to use Volapük re-formed the
    10 KB (1,505 words) - 15:22, 28 April 2021
  • ...y-states, and take over the Greek colonies on its coasts. Shortly after, a new period of prosperity began in the mid 1st millennium BCE, known as Classica ...changes, and by the 6th century BCE a new form of Lathian, written with a new alphabet, had emerged.
    19 KB (2,227 words) - 18:37, 5 July 2021
  • ...first with a common sound change (*ï>*a, *e>*ä merge and raise of *ë to a new *ï) while *ë,ï>i merge is established for Noroeic. West Alpian is known
    5 KB (778 words) - 11:36, 30 August 2018
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] || {{term|uez}}
    12 KB (1,423 words) - 10:27, 26 January 2024
  • ...monophthongs, some merging with original ''*ē'', whilst others becoming a new, perhaps more closed version, such as {{IPA-all|ɛː|}}, written ''*ē₂''
    5 KB (751 words) - 19:08, 14 April 2022
  • ...k in more or less pure Ilusal or Ruosal with each other and only introduce new loanwords if necessary, while in the south Sērsal mixed with Cirdamur and ...tablets. It is likely that Kērsalur slowly substituted Ķyrdum, becoming a new prestige variety and liturgical language. An evidence of this is the biling
    13 KB (1,922 words) - 10:30, 28 July 2021
  • ...ia rediscovery and reintroduction by Fasser to the classical world spurred new interest in the ancient world. Simultaneously powerful kingdoms were estab ...system used herein is the ''Common Dating System''. This aligns with the New Imperial Age calendar, but the name has been changed to a more neutral one.
    34 KB (5,204 words) - 14:39, 5 April 2020
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] || nuago, noghiore, noghesmo
    11 KB (1,223 words) - 14:33, 2 February 2023
  • ...ent is known or has been mentioned, or if on the contrary it is unknown or new in the conversation. The second kind of definiteness, DEF2, corresponds to | unknown/new ; typical || -t͡sa
    15 KB (2,335 words) - 18:21, 2 January 2018
  • ...ng from Eastern Pomorian but was slowly being substituted with Polish. But new Central and Southern dialectal groups began forming and thus creating a dia A new synthetic future tense came from an extension of "n-verb forms" of Old Pomo
    13 KB (1,835 words) - 17:00, 21 November 2017
  • ...vowel length. Reduced vowels were also present and probably also developed new vowel harmony counterparts, though most of those distinctions are erased in ...n, similarly to the Ancient Greek [[w:Mediopassive voice|mediopassive]]. A new theory suggests also objectival or intransitive endings in addition to the
    12 KB (1,759 words) - 18:52, 14 April 2022
  • ...enthesized less "nice" consonant clusters. Then CVCVC became analyzed as a new ablaut grade. Naengic developed a new associative plural suffix ''-am'', from PLak ''păm'' 'that; those (distal
    12 KB (1,828 words) - 01:57, 23 April 2023
  • Hello! Oka-- new teeth. That's weird. So where was I? Oh, that's right — Barcelona! The Eodus Project is a global effort towards creating a new country.
    14 KB (2,092 words) - 22:29, 21 November 2023
  • | minority = New Zealand<br>Hawai'i ...Kaikiwi Island; instead, the vast majority of said native speakers live in New Zealand or Hawai'i. The youngest of these native speakers, 78-year-old ''M�
    15 KB (2,207 words) - 09:38, 28 March 2024
  • |new
    5 KB (667 words) - 23:13, 15 February 2021
  • <tr><th>183</th><th>[[wiktionary:new|new]]</th><td>ney</td></tr>
    17 KB (3,082 words) - 06:14, 26 September 2022
  • ...informal compounds. The colloquial register involves many regionalisms and new vocabulary, and can be overwhelming for older generations and those unacqua Various affixes can be added to nouns to create new vocabulary. One common one is ''-ar'', which is usually used for agents of
    12 KB (1,712 words) - 03:54, 20 January 2017
  • ...where deaf children with no language were placed together and developed a new language. Similarly, if deaf parents were to raise a group of hearing child ...s. "Moribund" languages have only a few remaining native speakers, with no new acquisition, highly restricted use, and near-universal multilingualism. "Ex
    45 KB (5,936 words) - 19:11, 5 February 2021
  • ...erc-Polit) due to cultural isolation and exposure to both new cultures and new vocabulary. ...ange until the group was divided and then recombined, separately, with two new languages and cultures.
    19 KB (2,503 words) - 02:26, 20 January 2017
  • ...son and second-person verb inflections for this kind of verb as well. This new verb class, called ''Form II'' verbs by convention, represented a more mild
    6 KB (822 words) - 22:46, 27 March 2017
  • *Focused sentences: when a noun is specific and its existence or relevance is new information (e.g. is focused), it is not topicalized. Such a noun will comm :NEG only new COL evolve-PASS.PART DET PST.IPFV inhabit SG world COL dinosaur
    15 KB (2,463 words) - 07:28, 20 January 2023
  • ...g system. Some time later, an independent colony of Hebrews was formed in New Zealand, where they were eventually hunted to extinction by the fierce Maor
    15 KB (1,809 words) - 16:54, 20 March 2024
  • | new || nɔu̯
    5 KB (699 words) - 11:57, 3 October 2023
  • ...of the language comes from imagining ancient Hebrews being taken along to New Zealand in BC times and having a similar linguistic evolution. It was not === New Symbols ===
    20 KB (3,390 words) - 15:53, 21 March 2022
  • | style="text-align: center;"|new | style="text-align: center;"|new
    27 KB (3,642 words) - 02:32, 20 January 2017
  • ** new ''mr-'' > ''br-'', ''nr-'' > ''dr-'' ** ''eː, oː'' create new short vowels ''e, o'', merging with existing ''ɪ, ʊ'' as ''ê, ô'' (note
    23 KB (3,095 words) - 16:07, 17 April 2021
  • * Creation of a new /e/ phoneme, formed from historical /i/ and /ɨ/ before voiceless fricative * Creation of a new /ʃ/ phoneme from /s/ in various positions: before /i/ or /j/ and after voi
    22 KB (3,366 words) - 20:17, 5 November 2017
  • ...s the slightest hint of its meaning. Why should a word not be a picture? A new word, never seen before would then, like a painting seen for the first time
    6 KB (935 words) - 00:13, 6 February 2021
  • ...orms. E.g. ''kazakih'' could be translated as 'something at the bird'. The new locative absolutus ''kazakihi'' would mean literally 'at something at the b
    17 KB (2,584 words) - 14:12, 8 February 2021
  • ...uced the need for huge inventories a bit, as before them you had to invent new words for each logical distinction. The phonetic ability of humans probably
    11 KB (1,911 words) - 10:04, 1 June 2017
  • ...; however, it also alternates with SOV order in short sentences and when a new topic is introduced. The pre-verbal position in VSO-type sentences can be o ...inction. One word can have many suffixes, which can also be used to create new words and also indicate the grammatical function of the word. In some situa
    13 KB (2,061 words) - 11:36, 10 July 2020
  • ...ve of which are the historical dialects spoken in the Prefectures, and two new dialects that have arisen in modern times, a standardized "national" dialec ...inations, e.g. /kw/, /kr/, /kl/, /sm/, /sn/, /šm/,/šn/, /sl/, /šl/ . This new dialect is also replete with slang, loanwords (especially from Western sour
    31 KB (4,493 words) - 19:59, 8 July 2023
  • <tr><th>183</th><th>[[wiktionary:new|new]]</th><td>cusúb (cusb-, ''III'')</td></tr>
    18 KB (3,210 words) - 17:15, 20 January 2018
  • ...girls, overthrowing the reign of the Latin language, the acceptance of the new language grew quickly, in some years, all of the magical girls living in th ...ke some parts of the script better. This language will always add anything new, specially in lexicon and phonology, if I'm not liking some sounds. I alway
    27 KB (4,122 words) - 20:16, 27 August 2021
  • ...membered of the numerous works of [[John Wilkins]], in which he expounds a new [[universal language]], meant primarily to facilitate international communi ...wledged, was ''The Ground-Work or Foundation Laid ... for the Framing of a New Perfect Language'' (1652) by [[Francis Lodwick]].<ref>{{ODNBweb|id=37684|ti
    13 KB (1,927 words) - 02:16, 6 February 2021
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] || nō
    12 KB (1,583 words) - 17:50, 20 February 2024
  • <tr><th>183</th><th>[[wiktionary:new|new]]</th><td>noew(e)</td></tr>
    16 KB (2,761 words) - 07:37, 4 August 2022
  • ...Uralic tribes often conquered Flewtish-speaking areas by force, creating a new [[w:Adstratum|adstratum]]), Flewtish started differentiating into a series ...cabulary''' section includes some of these. The combining of roots to form new words is the main source of roughly 80% of the reconstructed vocabulary and
    15 KB (2,043 words) - 16:42, 1 May 2024
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] || nôbu || nôbu
    12 KB (1,599 words) - 05:34, 21 November 2022
  • ...ng of the Ilaséoi and the ascendancy of the House of Isreg brought about a new golden age for Thudrin. The newcomers adopted the dialect of their norther
    7 KB (1,000 words) - 04:29, 20 January 2017
  • ...used in the Chlouvānem world in the last few centuries to create words for new concepts (cf. ''jålihūrṣa'' "industry" ← ''chåll-forca'' "large tas
    6 KB (841 words) - 16:07, 18 August 2021
  • == We learn something new each day. ==
    13 KB (2,103 words) - 22:55, 16 March 2017
  • ...ed-languages/ |title=Questions Answered: Invented Languages |publisher=The New York Times Schott's Vocab blog}}</ref> ...freeze", expired in 2002. The speakers of Lojban are now free to construct new words and idioms, and decide where the language is heading.
    31 KB (4,821 words) - 16:53, 6 July 2021
  • *''Utim '''cip'''''. "The new tree." :cip, "new" → cip'''iv''', "newly"
    14 KB (2,137 words) - 14:46, 15 October 2021
  • |new || ||
    11 KB (1,362 words) - 07:51, 20 January 2017
  • New words.
    5 KB (955 words) - 03:18, 20 January 2017
  • ...a new compound, the following test can be applied to determine whether the new compound is also a lexeme: If the answer to 1 is "yes" or the answer to 2 is "no", the new word is a lexeme. Otherwise, it is a non-lemma form of an existing lexeme.
    19 KB (2,809 words) - 19:30, 8 December 2021
  • ** new medial ''h'' is quickly lost or moves to the front of the word, e.g. ''ifan
    7 KB (959 words) - 10:43, 13 February 2022
  • ...n elided, and the newly-exposed final consonants take on a wide variety of new forms. Final unstressed ⟨u⟩ is deleted word-finally in nouns and adject
    7 KB (942 words) - 15:50, 4 January 2023
  • * New Zealand: ''autærova'' or ''lališire jīlanda ga lanāye'', Maori: ''maury
    7 KB (1,104 words) - 19:21, 9 February 2020
  • | 183 || [[wiktionary:new|new]] || now || noʊ
    13 KB (1,797 words) - 14:16, 16 January 2023
  • He put new bowls on the long mat
    5 KB (940 words) - 03:02, 8 May 2024
  • ...All inflected forms (except for nominative-absolutive and accusative) are new formations in Elodian, not inherited from PIE. ...tive by the 15th century, replaced in productivity by compound verbs, with new compound verbs sometimes even replacing full verbs; the verbal part of comp
    23 KB (3,641 words) - 19:43, 19 April 2024
  • **șa tsuar thbam = happy new year *Lür Chad Mălem - New Mexico
    30 KB (4,915 words) - 19:01, 18 March 2024
  • <tr><th>183</th><th>[[wiktionary:new|new]]</th><td>néwos, -om, -ā</td></tr>
    18 KB (3,436 words) - 05:05, 1 October 2022
  • <tr><th>183</th><th>[[wiktionary:new|new]]</th><td>novus, -a, -ų </td></tr>
    19 KB (3,412 words) - 07:10, 7 August 2022
  • ...raltonian together with the corresponding continent, and Íscégon) into the new conworld. ...ither directions due to the tense relationship between the two countries). New Ézélonían Cerian is the standard dialect officially adopted in the count
    32 KB (5,288 words) - 20:32, 28 March 2022
  • ...l and immaterial) was damaged or lost, although it lead to the creation of new cultural identities paving the way for Raunan Middle Period. ...ugh the imperial Raunan identity disappeared as such, remnants survived as new ethnic identities while a large part of the original population was assimil
    33 KB (4,317 words) - 03:14, 19 January 2019
  • ...spoken in the Commonwealth of Vinland. When the Viking expeditions to the New World were launched in our world, the settlements that the Vikings formed d
    7 KB (1,095 words) - 12:56, 3 October 2023
  • ...4fa_fact_foer "John Quijada and Ithkuil, the Language He Invented"], ''The New Yorker'', December 24, 2012.</ref> designed to express deeper levels of hum ...with additional updates on the morphophonology and lexicon. As of 2019, a new (yet to be named) language is being developed by Quijada based on Ithkuil.
    41 KB (5,747 words) - 23:59, 24 July 2021
  • ...ack vowels can be present in a single word. This usually does not apply to new compound words and loanwords.
    8 KB (1,183 words) - 10:48, 21 August 2018
  • ...er of Chlouvānem loans in it, its use of Chlouvānem roots in order to coin new words, and its regular correspondences in sounds. Note that words given in
    8 KB (1,135 words) - 02:29, 19 November 2023
  • ...aut alterations, although they had been reduced early in its history. Some new alterations appeared instead and ablaut is still mostly productive even in ...e late XIVth century the process called the iotation happened resulting in new palatal phonemes.
    21 KB (3,150 words) - 19:09, 5 July 2021
  • ...glish: A dictionary of the international language|edition=Revised|location=New York|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group|year=1971}}</ref> m ...040702192153/http://www.interlingua.fi/ialagr45.htm |date=2004-07-02 }}'', New York: International Auxiliary Language Association, 1945.</ref>
    56 KB (7,951 words) - 15:21, 28 April 2021
  • ...tively densely populated cities, which helped establishing Kirtumur as the new official language after the decline of Kērsalur. ...r is mostly noun-like, meaning that they can receive case markers and form new pronouns by means of word composition.
    35 KB (5,462 words) - 12:28, 26 July 2021
  • ...ns that ''ašûbu'' (‘new’) can be used both with a noun: ''ašûbu zaphrâ'' (‘new flower’) and in a verb phrase: ''ašûbu izil-râkát amunam'' (‘she re ...cating the first syllable. Thus, ''ašûbu'' becomes '''''aš'''ašûbu'' (‘new-new’). This is a defining feature of the spoken language and occurs only rare
    15 KB (2,395 words) - 12:16, 6 August 2018
  • | Christmas and New Year greetings || * || /’evɒ/
    7 KB (1,133 words) - 03:32, 22 October 2018
  • ...low to high contour, and falling was a high to low contour. However these new tones added a second contour. For the dipping tone, it went from high to lo
    8 KB (1,163 words) - 18:13, 4 April 2024
  • | image = Flag of Ido (new).svg ...0, there were approximately 100–200 Ido speakers in the world, though more new estimates place the number of speakers closer to 1,000-5,000.<ref>{{Cite we
    50 KB (7,012 words) - 15:22, 28 April 2021
  • ...you can see, even though Sangi is a decendent of English it has developed new sounds which are unfamiliar to the English tongue, including a set of round When creating a new word from an English base, the consonants are changed first according to th
    29 KB (4,637 words) - 03:07, 20 January 2017
  • k, g, j, and m are the same as their english counterparts, nothing new here. (Allthough g is always pronounced as in "game", never as in "gem". Th
    7 KB (1,346 words) - 02:28, 20 January 2017
  • ...with reduplication and other innovative ways of playing with an influx of new verbal stems
    10 KB (1,149 words) - 12:22, 15 July 2021
  • ..."dh" for [ð̞]. In the early XXth century Jan Meyer's work was revised and new writing systems were proposed, in one of which long vowels were represented ...papers and literature. In 1961 Bohuslav Raudi (native name Eiki) created a new standard writing for both West and East Carpathian, based on previuos syste
    21 KB (3,234 words) - 10:50, 21 August 2018
  • | 183 || new || {{mc-t1|ⲃⲉⲣⲉ}}
    9 KB (717 words) - 05:50, 23 February 2021
  • .../small> ''(northern) autumn equinox''; ranire najaṣrāṇa <small>(Chlouvānem New Year)</small> ...based on lunar phases, and are called respectively ''chlærlīltāvi'' (from new to full moon) and ''līleñchlæryāvi''.
    31 KB (5,121 words) - 16:19, 28 August 2021
  • | {{term|nue}} || new
    10 KB (1,310 words) - 17:28, 6 March 2024
  • ...tural movement to retake the language of Angara. This saw the rise of many new roots that had previously been abandoned, as well as the heavy use of compo
    10 KB (1,349 words) - 14:02, 8 February 2021
  • |new=
    9 KB (1,061 words) - 09:44, 20 January 2017
  • By means of affixes and particles new words can be made up, both of the same class and of the other.<ref name="li ...Artificial Languages |location=Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien |year=2011 |page=180 |isbn=978-3-631-59678-4 |url-status
    24 KB (3,445 words) - 15:26, 28 April 2021
  • | new ||
    10 KB (1,869 words) - 02:51, 29 January 2024
  • ! Traditional Vowel Phonemes !! New Phoneme !! Pronunciations*
    8 KB (1,227 words) - 17:54, 28 October 2018
  • *Rest: Alor [New Morpheme] *Lie [down]: Ních [New Morpheme]
    24 KB (4,039 words) - 04:09, 24 July 2015
  • *ūrur "new" (cognate with Albanian ri)
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  • In the early 16th century, many new settlers began arrive in the islands. However, most of them were not from S ...aced French as the official language of the country in 1957, it was with a new orthography that was more phonetic. Despite Nousuerian being made the offic
    27 KB (4,194 words) - 02:23, 20 January 2017
  • ...e [[W:T-V distinction|T-V distinction]], there is a growing trend of using new invented pronouns to distinguish familiarity or respect. This started in th ...en expressing precise and difficult-to-explain concepts, and more novelly, new or invented concepts.
    19 KB (2,672 words) - 00:18, 9 May 2024
  • ...way), originally emphatic clitic pronouns became mandatory and then formed new verbal suffixes in all persons but the first singular and the third plural.
    9 KB (1,302 words) - 20:48, 11 March 2021
  • ...semantic features, although discourse processes (e.g. the introduction of new arguments that are roughly equal in animacy with previously established arg
    8 KB (1,335 words) - 02:17, 28 August 2018
  • ...remain, but people (men and women) die. The world becomes better as many new people are born. They say that to deny (this) is bad, and that we must bec
    8 KB (1,342 words) - 01:15, 1 February 2015
  • ...s. THE-acc.masc. MAN-acc.gend.1.sing. '''WHO''' '''THE'''-acc.masc.plur.'''NEW'''-erg.sing. '''SHOE'''-acc.gend.2.plur. '''HER'''-dat.fem.sing. '''SOLD''' :: ''I know the man '''who bought the new shoes for her'''.''
    29 KB (4,160 words) - 02:55, 29 January 2021
  • ** an Dá hEabhrac Logh = New York City ** an Dá Dheilí Logh = New Delhi
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  • ...ho républicain'', December 15, 1987</ref><ref>Webster, Paul, «''Uropi, the new lingua franca''», in ''The Guardian Weekly'', week of January 15, 1989</re ...ōh''. It has also been deliberately used in languages like English to form new words: "[[portmanteau]]-words", for instance, the famous London "smog" come
    17 KB (2,512 words) - 23:01, 5 February 2021
  • '''Novial'''{{efn|blend of {{lang|nov|novi}} (new) + {{abbr|IAL|international auxiliary language}}}} is a [[constructed langu ...the letters ''k'' and ''q'' and the first part of ''x'', also acquired the new sign ''c'' (before ''a, o, u'' and consonants), a practice with which nearl
    20 KB (3,105 words) - 15:30, 28 April 2021
  • ...pitulated to its surroundings. Here, however, it subsumed and appropriated new processes while maintaining ''all'' of its original syntax.
    10 KB (1,473 words) - 00:29, 31 March 2024
  • ...e, especially in the syllable onset, but is entirely predictable given the new surroundings in Southeast Asia and Oceania<ref>See geographic distribution,
    11 KB (1,554 words) - 00:20, 31 March 2024
  • In Central Khad, new consonant clusters, that had appeared after vowel reduction and elision, we
    9 KB (1,313 words) - 10:44, 9 May 2022
  • ...Dundulanyä words, and there are a few suffixes that can be used to derive new nouns from existing ones, sometimes male ones from female ones and vicevers
    13 KB (1,954 words) - 10:41, 31 March 2024
  • |mapcaption = New Greece or "Elas to Cain" ...the coast of New Carthage - our Cartagena in Spain. Its mission is to find new territories where they can live in peace and prosperity, far from the Persi
    45 KB (6,497 words) - 17:22, 19 September 2023
  • ...sg. ''-ah'', pl. ''-aa(h)''. Other masculine nouns fell together with the new class. |new =
    37 KB (5,149 words) - 08:51, 1 September 2021
  • | 96 || new || *cʼiiwi, *setni ||
    10 KB (1,489 words) - 12:01, 30 June 2020
  • While the Genitive has become the case to use when using prepositions, a new Genitive has emerged used 'ɑƚ' with the Common case. ==Standard New Gothic ==
    64 KB (5,424 words) - 18:47, 6 February 2024
  • ...er languages, many of which merged certain types into one and then created new ways to express information previously conveyed by them.
    10 KB (1,545 words) - 08:34, 20 June 2020
  • ...ore difficult sentence more comprehensible, highlight a topic, introduce a new topic, or end a previous topic. This phenomenon typically requires the use
    10 KB (1,599 words) - 15:28, 21 March 2024
  • | style="text-align: left" | Indicates new, non-derivable, or contrastive information.
    12 KB (1,619 words) - 02:53, 29 January 2021
  • * Pei, Mario. ''One Language for the World.'' Devin-Adair, New York: 1958.
    9 KB (1,361 words) - 23:04, 5 February 2021
  • ...riktinäm''' quotes: ''"Old Natalician may be the result of intervention of new local loanwords and the varieties of dialects may have caused a deviation o ...the monarchy by the hands of '''Goz Hoz''', and until the creation of the new republic by '''Zafel Sörät Fortla''', during the year 1845 when the offic
    28 KB (4,061 words) - 00:23, 28 March 2024
  • ...google.com/site/interglossa1943/contents] Harmondsworth, Middlesex, Eng. / New York: Penguin Books. OCLC 1265553.</ref> devised by the scientist [[Lancel ...language – “glossa” being the English transliteration), and thus founded a new auxiliary language.<ref name="GEO">Glosa Education Organisation (GEO) (2006
    31 KB (4,626 words) - 15:23, 28 April 2021
  • ...the Western dialects later gained a labialised allophone *å, resulting in new o-phoneme), development of syllabic sonorants into diphthongoids with the i ...survive. Such disconnected patterns exist solely as independent words, no new forms arise from that pattern. Different dialects may preserve different "p
    33 KB (4,918 words) - 14:45, 6 May 2023
  • ! new
    16 KB (2,567 words) - 00:26, 7 September 2018
  • ...e empty morphemes, and these are often elided completely being replaced by new morphemes with the same meaning. This indicates, that Lántun is an ancient ...ix or (more typically) a suffix, added to the base root in order to derive new roots from the existing ones. There are several types of formatives, most o
    42 KB (6,575 words) - 17:57, 9 October 2022
  • ...may change the phoneme in both spoken and written language when producing new grammatical forms (such as comparatives and vocatives), a list of such muta ! colspan="3" scope="col" style="text-align: center;"|''new''
    52 KB (5,052 words) - 21:25, 4 July 2021
  • ...demy abandoning Schleyer's Volapük in favor of [[Idiom Neutral]] and other new constructed language projects. Another reason for the decline of Volapük m ...e=One Language for the World|date=1968|publisher=Biblo and Tannen|location=New York|page=134|url=https://www.questia.com/read/591845/one-language-for-the-
    30 KB (4,653 words) - 15:35, 28 April 2021
  • ...rew upon common elements of these closely related languages to construct a new Kiitra language. While intended for use in trade and government administrat
    10 KB (1,421 words) - 02:08, 9 September 2015
  • ...the [[w:Dravidian languages|Dravidian]] languages and various families in New Guinea and Australia; however, none of these proposals has much academic su
    11 KB (1,673 words) - 07:22, 2 April 2017
  • | ancestor = [[New Latin language|Neo Latin]] ...google.com/site/interglossa1943/contents] Harmondsworth, Middlesex, Eng. / New York: Penguin Books: p. 10-11. OCLC 1265553.</ref>)
    31 KB (4,607 words) - 15:41, 28 April 2021
  • * '''new''' ''adj.'' nu [OP. nuu] * '''new''' ''adj.'' nu (OP. nuu)
    18 KB (2,661 words) - 20:38, 17 December 2021
  • ...re produced by real-life conlangers and available online in .pdf format. A new article is published on the first of every month.
    12 KB (1,694 words) - 14:48, 10 December 2023
  • #We learn something new each day.
    9 KB (1,659 words) - 02:02, 13 April 2019
  • |c=en| new
    12 KB (2,079 words) - 12:20, 27 February 2017
  • The most common way of deriving new words is by compounding. ...ang'' 'drink water'. This is a large and highly productive class, in which new verbs can be formed easily. Reduplicated verbs also fall into this category
    33 KB (4,746 words) - 16:21, 30 April 2024
  • and imposed [new] laws for us,
    10 KB (1,576 words) - 00:32, 1 December 2018
  • The Eastern languages lost their consonant clusters in all positions, though new medial clusters later formed due to syncope: ''*'''sp'''autʰanVs (P-L)>''' ...tʲ, and *tʲʰ which become affricates in both Thad and Khad groups. Later a new classification was developed, which makes a distinction between '''Central'
    23 KB (3,455 words) - 21:51, 23 July 2022
  • ...|publisher=[[Routledge]]|year=2010|isbn=9780415424325|edition=3rd|location=New York|pages=34|chapter=Artificial languages|oclc=656296619}}</ref> ...t=Arika|publisher=Spiegel & Grau|year=2009|isbn=978-0-385-52788-0|location=New York|chapter=The Klingons, the Conlangers, and the Art of Language – 26.
    43 KB (6,674 words) - 19:10, 19 March 2022
  • ...ation. Southerners and more Central speakers do the same, but lengthen the new monophthong. Thus, it can be said that Southerners distinguish vowel length
    19 KB (2,811 words) - 13:20, 26 April 2018
  • ...uage-development and regulatory body. There's also a small diaspora in the New World. |new=nuıd
    20 KB (2,931 words) - 13:28, 9 March 2024
  • ...as to be conquered by the New Kingdom. And if there was one thing that the New Kingdom ''did'' want, it was to conquer the northern city-states. A war was ...otect a local chief. Afterwards a small town arose around the fortress and new walls were built. One wall wasn't considered enough, in total three walls w
    41 KB (6,566 words) - 21:44, 4 July 2021
  • ...le Northern dialect was heavily influenced by Low German resulting in some new features of it such as an initial stress and loss of the pitch accent. howe ...cate events expected in the future. In Eastern dialects this form became a new future tense.
    24 KB (3,549 words) - 11:57, 26 January 2018
  • ...onant (which was always voiceless) disappeared, which left /m̥ n̥ ʍ l̥/ as new phonemes. ...-person singular and third-person plural pronouns (''-ge'' and ''-di'') as new accusative affixes on nouns contributed to the development of a noun case s
    21 KB (3,056 words) - 21:48, 20 November 2023
  • ...so lenited. Note that this occurred after tonogenesis was complete, and no new tones were generated. Consequently all unaspirated stops opening stressed s
    11 KB (1,481 words) - 20:41, 2 January 2023
  • | Christmas and New Year greetings || * || /’evɒ/
    11 KB (1,662 words) - 15:15, 6 October 2017
  • | '''new''' || adj. ''bizi''
    14 KB (1,684 words) - 09:43, 3 July 2021
  • ; With C : חל, חר, and חו. New words no longer force '''sl-''' to change to '''cl-'''. ...ed, and the elite. The end of Jewish dominance may have come in 1290, but new words were still being coined from Hebrew for some time afterwards. Eventu
    21 KB (2,663 words) - 19:05, 23 October 2022
  • ...a_fact_foer "John Quijada and Ithkuil, the Language He Invented"], ''[[The New Yorker]]'', Dec. 24, 2012.</ref> constructed language created by Suzette Ha
    12 KB (1,749 words) - 17:44, 8 February 2021
  • | New
    13 KB (2,113 words) - 00:36, 9 May 2024
  • ...s have more Roman influence. The Roman Empire extended that far and made a new dialect for the Unitɪx language’s original dialect is further north beca
    10 KB (1,384 words) - 00:03, 10 January 2024
  • ...an find all verb and root words in this dictionary. Everybody can create a new word with these words and Hurayish’s suffix. # Prefix : teze Barq (New House)
    59 KB (9,629 words) - 05:57, 24 October 2020
  • ...e the Maryan Coptic language were created in March 2018, initially titled 'New Coptic' and 'Neo-Egyptian'.These early drafts detailed a modified Latin alp ...November of the same year. Most current Maryan texts/translations use this new Latin script, informally titled "Latin v2". Although most documentation on
    26 KB (3,410 words) - 02:13, 24 June 2023
  • ...ve suffixes, with the (pro)noun's original case agreeing with the head the new locative/lative word modifies. Possessive/informal pronouns use ''-ha'' in ...ves (for example ''töngtöng²'' "somewhat narrow" from ''töng²'' "narrow"), new iterative or reflexive meanings from some verbs (for example ''harar³'' "i
    24 KB (3,400 words) - 19:22, 13 March 2024
  • | '''new''' || ''niw'' | '''new''' || ''niw''
    26 KB (2,734 words) - 21:14, 30 January 2024
  • ...r languages leaving only a bunch of substrate words and place names. Those new cultures would be quite advanced and prosperous for a long time until about ...unstressed vowels merged into [ə] and vowel assimilation, which then gave new consonant alterations. This was due to increasing contacts with more techno
    35 KB (5,645 words) - 14:25, 4 December 2019
  • ...nly they are new in attested history and their use in these poems formed a new corpus of legends that survives in traditional culture up to the present da ...lution in Chlouvānem literature: the birth of theater (''bræšlanah'') as a new, distinct genre. Chlouvānem theater before the Skyrdegan contact was virtu
    82 KB (13,545 words) - 20:01, 30 July 2020
  • ...onstructed language created by Macy Sinrich, a 17 year old in Cherry Hill, New Jersey
    15 KB (2,124 words) - 19:25, 9 February 2021
  • * '''Compounding''' &ndash; combining two lemmas to create a new lemma * '''Class derivation''' &ndash; forming new nouns by altering the class of an existing noun
    49 KB (6,456 words) - 14:40, 30 December 2022
  • * /β/+/ʌ/, in either order, simplified to a new vowel, /y/, which later lowered to /ø/ to contrast with /i/. * Similarly to the formation of the new absolutive prefixes, causative prefixes formed from the ergative/possessive
    36 KB (5,155 words) - 20:09, 8 August 2019
  • ...ry was chosen to replace the old 'Greater Alaska' in order to distance the new country from Russia shortly after its independence in 1917.
    13 KB (1,768 words) - 15:27, 10 May 2024
  • ...from Old Meskangela in approximately 300 BNE and remained spoken until the New Era, after which it remained only a written standard, as local dialects gai '''New Meskangela''' dialects are written in the '''Meskangēl''' script, a descen
    54 KB (7,594 words) - 16:20, 30 October 2022
  • In 2014 a new official website was launched on the "elefen.org" domain: it offers various LFN has a small number of regular [[affixes]] that help to create new words.
    26 KB (3,817 words) - 06:03, 11 February 2021
  • | n || || n || || '''n'''y \nyː\ new ...at our current enemies and avenge all ancient dishonors. Then it will be a new golden age for the bearded race. If the men and halflings know their place,
    23 KB (3,675 words) - 13:31, 31 October 2020
  • There is a limited number of ways to make new verbs in Kirtumur. The most productive way is to combine existing words to ...it. Kirtumur preserves ablaut only in derivational morphology as a relic, new verbs cannot be created this way anymore: ''nila'' "to float (by itself)" �
    31 KB (4,874 words) - 05:47, 6 September 2021
  • |183||niujis||frisk||new
    8 KB (1,366 words) - 17:07, 5 January 2023
  • |imagecaption = Flag of the New World Order |nation = New World Order
    109 KB (18,319 words) - 14:19, 6 December 2023
  • ...that two or more words are combined in order to create a new lexeme with a new, unique meaning. ...advantage of this technique of word formation is, that the meaning of the new word can be derived from the individual elements it consists of. For exampl
    52 KB (7,787 words) - 09:03, 9 April 2023
  • | Christmas and New Year greetings ||
    12 KB (1,735 words) - 04:43, 16 April 2020
  • ...d with {{IPA|/j/}} in all islands but the outermost ones (New Paphlagonia, New Bithynia, Saint-Étienne, and the Bâtõnhâmu group) and the central mount ...ames were borrowed at the same time, but, in 1950, they were replaced by a new calendar, the Revolutionary Calendar, where all month names except three (M
    37 KB (5,211 words) - 08:53, 21 May 2020
  • ...o present day English (mainly Australian English, with some influence from New Zealand and South African English). However, they are sometimes not recogni *English "dark l" has vocalised, creating new diphthongs ending in /u/ e.g. /iu/, /eu/, /au/, /ou/. The sequence in Engli
    47 KB (6,975 words) - 02:21, 20 January 2017
  • ...ical and Social History of Pandora |publisher=!t (HarperCollins) |location=New York City |first=Maria |last=Wilhelm |author2=Mathison, Dirk |year=2009 |is ...om/2009/12/06/magazine/06FOB-onlanguage-t.html |title=Skxawng! |work=[[The New York Times]] |first=Benjamin |last=Zimmer |author-link=Benjamin Zimmer |dat
    28 KB (4,321 words) - 20:36, 18 October 2023
  • Reduplication is a common way of deriving new vocabulary. However, while the single syllable root and the compound will |new=
    27 KB (4,107 words) - 12:03, 18 January 2019
  • * ''hulābdān heirom peithū!'' - Happy birthday! (lit. "good walk in the/your [new] year")
    13 KB (2,165 words) - 15:59, 11 June 2021
  • ! new
    18 KB (2,798 words) - 12:30, 10 May 2023
  • ! width="70" style="text-align:left"|New Determiner ! width="70" style="text-align:left"|New Determiner (Pl)
    27 KB (4,465 words) - 09:43, 20 January 2017
  • |c=03|mănew ! new
    17 KB (2,870 words) - 01:04, 15 June 2019
  • ...true una nova linea de metro al centro urban.'' &nbsp; 'They're building a new subway line to downtown.' ...'Interlingua: a grammar of the international language''. Storm Publishers, New York, 1951.
    27 KB (4,334 words) - 13:57, 26 April 2021
  • ...ung)</small>;<br/>''brūmake'' <small>(brūm-, 1) (inanimate, i.e. old = not new)</small>;<br/>''sārvake'' <small>(sāru-, 1) (ancient, things from very ol
    13 KB (1,926 words) - 13:16, 2 September 2021
  • ! new
    18 KB (2,817 words) - 01:20, 20 April 2019
  • ...texts. The old Doslox writing system was also returned into use. Since the new language is a bit clumsy and spoken over a wide region, many different dial ...le most locations use possessive. The prepositions can be combined to form new: 'po' + 'mo' = 'pomo' where 'to' + 'in' = 'into'
    32 KB (5,141 words) - 11:19, 25 March 2021
  • ...adigm, the old indirect argument is moved to the accusative case, with the new applicative argument taking the indirect case. In the ergative paradigm, t | Ijan-IND.SG send-ERG.PST.1SG cap-ACC.SG new-T.ACC.SG
    57 KB (8,145 words) - 10:01, 20 August 2020
  • ...eated by Yegor Karpov in 2014. Its name is composed by the words ''nov'' ("new") and ''slovo'' ("word"). Its main features are lexical purism, wealthy pho
    20 KB (2,499 words) - 16:41, 6 July 2021
  • We learn something new each day.
    11 KB (2,105 words) - 00:51, 10 May 2023
  • 151. We learn something new each day.
    10 KB (1,711 words) - 22:08, 24 November 2019
  • ...into the conversation, that is we use the indefinite article to talk about new and not known informations, to talk about undetermined informations. ...t perfect is used with the auxiliary inflected to past or future, then two new tenses are formed: the past perfect and the future perfect. The former is u
    70 KB (11,349 words) - 21:19, 4 July 2021
  • | 151||We learn something new each day.||
    11 KB (1,884 words) - 14:56, 24 December 2018
  • | 151 || We learn something new each day ||
    12 KB (1,925 words) - 19:47, 19 November 2018
  • ...tant derivational morphology in Lodeen. Often, prefixes are used to create new lexical content, whereas suffixes will modify the grammatical category of a
    14 KB (2,279 words) - 14:26, 8 February 2021
  • We learn something new each day.
    27 KB (3,574 words) - 05:40, 21 November 2023
  • We learn something new each day.
    27 KB (3,578 words) - 05:44, 21 November 2023
  • We learn something new each day.
    27 KB (3,578 words) - 11:50, 29 January 2024
  • We learn something new each day.
    27 KB (3,578 words) - 16:24, 3 February 2024
  • head, start, beginning, origin, top, new, from, above, since, fresh, first–fruits, source, r. 5, 10
    9 KB (1,151 words) - 02:21, 20 March 2022
  • ...Manish verbal and nominal systems. However, it has also innovated various new features. Phonetically, it is one of the more conservative Manish languages
    16 KB (2,555 words) - 23:37, 24 February 2020
  • ...y user Fox Saint-Just in 2013. Its name is composed by the words ''nov'' ("new") and ''basa'' ("language"). Its main features are a regular phonetic inven
    14 KB (2,040 words) - 11:53, 17 April 2022
  • ...tressed vowel reduction) and using Chlouvānem roots and words for building new words. This table shows the sound correspondences between Chlouvānem and I * ''uNissuaq uKinngaa'' or ''uRanire uNaatšašaraan'' (New Year — [[Chlouvānem|Chl.]]: ranire nājaṣrān) - 1 ruMaanguta
    34 KB (5,039 words) - 02:31, 19 November 2023
  • | 151 || We learn something new each day ||
    12 KB (1,954 words) - 20:29, 19 November 2018
  • We learn something new each day.
    27 KB (3,611 words) - 05:44, 21 November 2023
  • |new
    18 KB (2,143 words) - 14:43, 7 March 2024
  • Particles modify contentives to give them new shades of meaning. The vast majority of particles are very short words. For ...qe'' "and unrelatedly" can be used to prevent this as well as to introduce new topics.
    36 KB (5,140 words) - 07:52, 18 October 2023
  • Derivational suffixes can be used to extend the root and create a new set of stems, such as the causative {{ash|-y-}} or the intensive {{ash|-(d) New non-verb information is focused by fronting, i.e. introducing the word or p
    34 KB (5,379 words) - 09:27, 30 January 2024
  • ...th a '''j''' immediately preceding. However, due to various sound laws, a new declension subcategory has arisen that does not exactly follow the form of
    19 KB (2,497 words) - 15:12, 8 May 2023
  • ...Hibu, an island protectorate of Papua New Guinea lying to the northeast of New Ireland. Although little is known of the history of the language, both its
    41 KB (6,274 words) - 15:05, 6 August 2021
  • ...t I had no language available on which to tack it on. So, I started with a new one. What originally was termed the language of the little birds (the word
    20 KB (2,818 words) - 21:36, 4 July 2021
  • ...e last version of this Conlang. Instead of old forms and system we created new forms and selected the forms in Hurayish Dialect. We accepted 4 alphabets a ...on the paper. In 2019 we created a new System for Al Bakiyye and created a new Alphabet, Font and Script. The Classic Al Bakiyye was born in 2019 years. I
    142 KB (19,137 words) - 00:23, 12 July 2022
  • Two verbal roots are combined to convey a new meaning (see ''Derivational morphology: Special compositional functions of They may both act like intensifiers, either forming new lexemes or acting as intensive aspect marker. The verb ''kĕs'' to.hit is m
    46 KB (6,907 words) - 23:09, 29 September 2017
  • ...alternatives to their corresponding analytic expressions, and even derive new lexical items. Mithun (1984) has identified four categories of NI that occu # Type I - Lexical Compounding: the creation of new lexical items by compounding a noun root and verb root;
    68 KB (10,512 words) - 14:22, 21 January 2023
  • * newo = new; young; recent; fresh
    11 KB (1,488 words) - 14:49, 8 February 2021
  • # We learn something new each day.
    14 KB (2,524 words) - 19:38, 25 February 2020
  • ...nguage (particles, case suffixes, prepositions etc.) and combine them in a new way. There is no real purpose or design goal of this language what might be ...he language exist from about 1500 years BC. About 1000 years (1000 AD) ago new settlers arrived at the shores of the northern coast. Those settlers, Irish
    122 KB (18,674 words) - 15:34, 8 April 2020
  • ! new
    19 KB (3,046 words) - 11:39, 2 July 2020
  • Voiceless stops except ''th'' are unaspirated, as in Dutch. (In New York they are aspirated the same way as in American English.) *For younger speakers of Glommish in New York, the distinction between non-palatalized and palatalized is neutralize
    57 KB (8,574 words) - 23:55, 18 February 2024
  • ...ing in the city spoke primarily in German and Polish and Pomorian speaking new settlers began to forget their native tongue instead speaking the languages ...lect. It was untill 1989, when a Polish linguist Sauliu Dzelini proposed a new Pomorian Proper, based on his native dialect of Viestūtė (Wiastowce in Po
    58 KB (8,861 words) - 19:09, 5 July 2021
  • True nouns are uninflected and are a closed class in Sowaár. New nouns are formed by attaching relativizing clitics on verbs. ...incorporation, and accumulation of prefixes are common in literary works. New words can thus be easily created.
    34 KB (5,287 words) - 14:03, 2 May 2023
  • == We learn something new each day. ==
    11 KB (1,828 words) - 19:15, 16 March 2017
  • ...a few situations and a noun’s gender may easily be forgotten or confused. New borrowings are always of the common gender.
    17 KB (2,648 words) - 22:02, 4 July 2021
  • | 183||new||nove||||||||新 ( sin )
    11 KB (1,005 words) - 13:57, 26 April 2021
  • ...in Finland with the local dialects and by older people elsewhere, but any new speakers are taught to write with the Cyrillic alphabet.
    15 KB (2,153 words) - 14:43, 26 March 2024
  • So I needed a new justification for the language: enter the Lemizh, a people living to the we Forming noun phrases does not require any new grammatical rules. Changing the inner case of "give" in the first example s
    63 KB (9,753 words) - 20:36, 3 June 2022
  • ...to three components and often two words can be strung together to create a new compound whose meaning does not agree with that of its components, such as ...ually the two suffixes -á and -ó. When this happens, consonants before the new stressed syllable will fortify and if the word contained an internal accent
    48 KB (7,903 words) - 14:51, 8 February 2021
  • ...mble a broken egg! They could have just thrown it in the trash and make a new batch of egg noodles, but the crazy king sent his army instead to have the
    16 KB (2,785 words) - 20:52, 12 March 2022
  • ...n|Faebran]]”<br /><small>(the world beyond the veil),</small> and parts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania ...tionary: -ingee#Brooding|ingee]]'' to the end. This is actually creating a new noun by suffixing ''[[Contionary: -ing#Brooding|ing]]'', then suffixing ''[
    113 KB (16,337 words) - 06:38, 14 November 2023
  • ...tive'') to blossom, to flower, to spring. (''imperfective'') to be young, new, fresh.
    21 KB (2,883 words) - 21:07, 2 November 2020
  • |c=en| [[new]]
    21 KB (3,455 words) - 16:53, 9 August 2022
  • ...rtian, or Alpian, Carpathian and Hirtian are three separate branches; so a new term "Oronaic" became being used more. It derives from Classical Greek ὄ�
    19 KB (2,588 words) - 18:50, 14 April 2022
  • ...don't conflict with the original version of the language, such as various new methods of communication, including: a set of symbols, using the seven colo
    20 KB (2,920 words) - 15:41, 28 April 2021
  • ...into the conversation, that is we use the indefinite article to talk about new and not known informations, to talk about undetermined informations. |newær
    17 KB (2,365 words) - 09:43, 20 January 2017
  • ...of the early success for Occidental in this period came from the office's new central location, along with the efforts of [[Engelbert Pigal]], also from Besides an advantageous new location in a city closer to the centre of Europe, the Vienna period was al
    116 KB (17,850 words) - 15:24, 28 April 2021
  • ...into the conversation, that is we use the indefinite article to talk about new and not known informations, to talk about undetermined informations. |newær
    18 KB (2,381 words) - 07:52, 20 January 2017
  • *All affixes that are inseparable in terms of a new meaning conveyed <br/> e.g. ''-en'' appended to tinwet "teach": |new=
    32 KB (4,790 words) - 02:22, 20 January 2017
  • ===New World dialect===
    50 KB (7,852 words) - 16:09, 29 July 2022
  • ...ranto grammar with Slavic elements. Just like in natural Slavic languages, new words can be formed with a variety of suffixes and prefixes. Most words are
    16 KB (2,132 words) - 05:55, 11 February 2021
  • |c=en| new
    16 KB (3,213 words) - 10:35, 28 July 2021
  • While the other Germanic languages were adopting many new scientific and technical words, which were coined from Latin and Greek root ...s Latin and Greek loanwords, and relies mostly on Germanic roots to create new vocabulary. Consequently, most Shoundavish words are of Germanic origin, ei
    68 KB (8,468 words) - 08:25, 5 November 2023
  • ...''' that Laceyiam is not being worked on anymore, as [[Chlouvānem]] is its new version. ...(roughly comparable in size, geographical characteristics, and location to New Guinea).
    129 KB (20,357 words) - 13:13, 21 January 2018
  • | '''new''' || ''nuevu''
    24 KB (2,870 words) - 19:46, 2 March 2021
  • **a > ea, e > eo, i > iu in certain conditions - what type of pal'n do these new vowels trigger
    15 KB (2,308 words) - 22:01, 18 November 2023
  • | new
    21 KB (2,725 words) - 15:14, 24 November 2022
  • We know that, nobody needs a new language and there isvery developer language like Esperanto and of course o '''English''': “New house” or “the house which is the new”.
    50 KB (6,694 words) - 18:48, 26 October 2020
  • ...ff into the various Aeranid languages. A form of Classical Aeranir called New Aeranir or Medieval Aeranir remained in use in official writings even after ...ical Aeranir as it was spoken in the 17th and 16th centuries {{Smallcaps|[[New Imperial Age|bnia]]}}, this should not be seen in the context of a sliding
    106 KB (16,448 words) - 12:25, 15 July 2021
  • * permanent vocabulary (yet with unlimited possibilities for creating new terms) ...conlangs are regulated by people, so they are always subject to additions, new regulations and alterations. Conlangs are adjusted by their makers, while o
    63 KB (11,168 words) - 15:21, 3 April 2024
  • **''ðiš'' 'new'
    16 KB (2,269 words) - 09:12, 9 January 2023
  • ! new
    23 KB (3,581 words) - 23:54, 10 July 2022
  • ...ough society until it eventually ousted the native ''Kelt'' entirely. This new vernacular was marked by a large number of borrowings from ''Kelt'' and by
    23 KB (3,301 words) - 10:26, 12 March 2022
  • **Forming compound tenses, which can either form new tenses or disambiguate existing forms - e.g. ''gaaⱳa gwaaran'' "will be t
    17 KB (2,277 words) - 20:02, 9 October 2018
  • opavir: new
    12 KB (1,939 words) - 14:27, 10 August 2023
  • ...in, Master: all of the old teams, as well as another set of teams with the new person!"
    15 KB (2,471 words) - 17:17, 27 July 2022
  • ...by around 60,000 people on the Hibu Islands in the Hibu Province of Papua New Guinea. It is called by its speakers either ''nenge wena'' or ''nenge wana'
    27 KB (4,016 words) - 15:04, 8 February 2021
  • ...erb, as well as being used nonproductively on some verbs deriving verbs of new meanings.
    21 KB (2,828 words) - 09:40, 4 May 2024
  • NEW DECLENSION ...We'll have all of the old teams, as well as another set of teams with the new person!"
    35 KB (5,368 words) - 17:12, 11 June 2023
  • ...s were taken from the conjugation of <small>SEDEŌ</small> "to sit" (with a new, stative verb *<small>SEDITŌ</small> being developed for that meaning); ho * New Year's Day: ''na prima dir an''
    51 KB (7,540 words) - 07:15, 20 April 2019
  • ...ges in the first half of the first millennium AD, resulting in an entirely new form of Brittonic which subsequently diverged into the languages of Cumbrae ...aiding, appeared to be reflected in the poetry of the ''Priv Verdh'' and a new but considerably less sophisticated period of the bardic craft developed.
    81 KB (11,923 words) - 13:50, 4 May 2024
  • ...person and number of their subjects. Many verb affixes are preserved, and new compound tenses are created. The future subjunctive is a new periphrastic tense which developed from the present subjunctive forms of ''
    60 KB (9,400 words) - 14:36, 8 February 2021
  • ...s not too surprising when one takes into account that this is a relatively new development – the old dual was ''-idü'' – traces of which can be seen
    22 KB (3,452 words) - 21:58, 4 July 2021
  • ...minative, and sometimes the most difficult to grasp for the student who is new to grammatical cases.
    34 KB (4,845 words) - 13:26, 16 November 2022
  • |new=nyøa
    15 KB (2,191 words) - 13:29, 5 May 2021
  • ...’t have a lot of information yet and we will now get more information. The new information we usually get in a relative subordinate clause. Compare this t ## '''dören ble malað''' → the door is being painted (becomes painted), in a new color or wasn’t painted before
    124 KB (20,021 words) - 17:05, 17 August 2016
  • ...: An edition, translation and discussion'' (Palgrave Macmillan 2007, ''The New Middle Ages'') where she discusses [[w:Lingua Ignota|Lingua Ignota]] in the
    26 KB (4,105 words) - 10:17, 11 September 2023
  • ...h being among these) and so would end in ''n'' resulting in the need for a new declension. Along with this was a less frequently used animate neuter which
    26 KB (3,819 words) - 20:04, 28 January 2024
  • ...n. In the creation of the language, there was a preference towards forming new words using existing word stems rather than directly loaning the foreign wo
    23 KB (3,105 words) - 03:35, 1 April 2024
  • ...://szkolazklasa.gazeta.pl/szkolazklasa/1,58420,1905232.html : Now@ Mow@] ("New Language"), in: ''Wiedza i Życie'', February 2004. This article is mostly,
    24 KB (3,743 words) - 15:36, 28 April 2021
  • '''Sue''' went to New York.
    26 KB (4,245 words) - 22:34, 3 January 2021
  • ...but etymologically the phonemes {{IPA|/z ʒ/}} are found only in loans from New Persian and Arabic through Persian (starting from ca. the 9th century CE), ...from ''vexillum''). Today this written distinction is still maintained in new coinings in the case of derivational suffixes (most notably ''-né'') attac
    110 KB (17,430 words) - 20:06, 10 June 2022
  • ...y lengthening (e.g. Brit. ''*pempe'' > PBz ''*pɛːpe''), the development of new rising diphthongs (e.g. Brit. ''*cɛːton'' > PBz. ''*ciada'') and the fall ...ins with a period of renewed contact with the outside world, which brought new loanwords (particularly of Greek and Latin origin) and resulted in a vernac
    64 KB (9,531 words) - 16:43, 29 May 2021
  • | new || adj. || HDT || *qatal || חדשׁ || ''eššu'' || 𐎈𐎒𐎘
    18 KB (2,174 words) - 00:19, 31 March 2024
  • ...lso was borowed from the name of Fruwi. Other languages, like Russo, got a new name, but languages like Funris-ox was also derived from Late Proto-Fruwi's
    24 KB (3,248 words) - 04:01, 8 March 2024
  • |new = novo
    33 KB (4,106 words) - 14:41, 20 July 2021
  • ...sed to the stem-initial cluster where the consonants interacted to produce new consonants and clusters.
    21 KB (2,951 words) - 13:34, 23 March 2024
  • ...lects diverged, it became obvious that the old boundary became obsolete. A new boundary is placed roughly along the '''Ropra''' (or ''Ravar'') river to th
    25 KB (3,784 words) - 09:49, 4 May 2021
  • ...ing. Without the case marker, it is a sentence describing the dog, and the new information is that it bit the lizard. This is analagous to the difference
    66 KB (11,402 words) - 14:20, 5 December 2019
  • ...atures and objects were introduced to them and to help facilitate learning new words for things, the Angels started putting these things into classificati
    51 KB (8,305 words) - 18:34, 5 July 2021
  • ...t is also used with some verbs as a non-shifting prefix ''wai-'' to derive new meanings; in some regions ''wai-'' is used on all verbs instead of particle
    27 KB (3,855 words) - 20:49, 24 March 2024
  • <span style="color:red;">'''Update update (27/8/2019): A brand new grammar sketch is currently in the works. Soon after that gets written, I p ...dinate nouns help identify the head, whereas ''na'' and ''va'' phrases add new information to the head.
    84 KB (12,089 words) - 03:50, 28 April 2020
  • ...In 1950 a few changes were made in the language that introduced words for new concepts and organised the rules of accurately representing foreign words. ...ngthening after the loss of [ʔ] in some words (𐤕𐤔̄𐤀 ''tissā'' "you take"), new borrowings (𐤊𐤀𐤓𐤕 ''kārt'', plural ''karahūth'', "credit card"
    51 KB (6,442 words) - 08:59, 10 December 2021
  • ...oup, all from Bāzor Province, declared the Bāzor dialect as the basis of a new official standard language. The Academy instituted another series of langua
    29 KB (3,886 words) - 04:53, 9 April 2023
  • | Waxing || Full || Waning || New ...incorporated noun acting as the true direct object, or transitive taking a new direct object, e.g. ''az ba burushigos da'' "he throws a spear", ''Furiko b
    51 KB (7,001 words) - 11:29, 29 July 2021
  • |1>1-learn thing new day each at ||display-messages=no|italics1=yes|italics2=no|italics3=no|We learn something new each day.}}
    52 KB (8,565 words) - 21:53, 18 April 2024
  • ...entury to modern day):''' Borrowings and calques from German, English, and New Latin. ...ctal variants -->!! Perso-Arabic (Arabske) !! Old Gothic (Alþgutske) !! New Gothic (Neygutske) !! Cyrillic (Cyrillske) !! Examples
    87 KB (11,929 words) - 17:14, 14 May 2023
  • ...ar sound correspondences and using Chlouvānem roots and words for building new words. This table shows the sound correspondences between Chlouvānem and I
    27 KB (3,826 words) - 02:24, 19 November 2023
  • TolsianR makes use of both prefixes and suffixes to derive new words from older ones ; some suffixes can change a word's grammatical categ
    31 KB (4,350 words) - 23:09, 7 February 2017
  • *Add the new words to wordlist *A new sgv-plv-col system arises, marked by determiners. Definiteness is lost.
    47 KB (7,458 words) - 22:57, 18 June 2023
  • ...tly been generalized or shifted to similar elements in the Ur-Chlouvānem's new homeland. ...losing one point of articulation for stops (the labiovelar) but gaining a new one (the retroflex). At least one phoneme, the glottal stop, was introduced
    101 KB (16,303 words) - 11:59, 30 March 2024
  • ...partial exception, because while sharing the same restrictions to forming new verbs it has some hundreds of verb roots in common use. Some vernaculars, p ...language column it means that the word did not shift meaning but acquired new ones in addition to those it already had.
    60 KB (9,222 words) - 16:58, 6 November 2021
  • When presenting a new stance that can change the general consensus, even if based on observation, | translation = The new product is, apparently, more effective.
    140 KB (22,511 words) - 16:03, 11 June 2021
  • ...mmatical structures, as the language leaned toward the Latin spoken by the new settlers. Despite the Roman occupation, the islands enjoyed considerable au ...veral sound changes and regularization which still makes them a hazard for new learners. Roots containing so-called "weak" letters influence the sounds of
    63 KB (9,912 words) - 18:23, 12 September 2023
  • ...' and ''-ухъ'' respectively. These suffixes are also mostly used to derive new verbs, for example ''диркӏ, диркӏгьэ'' "to see, to look" and '
    29 KB (2,997 words) - 07:10, 8 April 2024
  • ..., {{IPA|[brɪθənˈig]}}, was created as a hobby in 1996 by Andrew Smith from New Zealand, who also invented the [[w:alternate history|alternate history]] of Compound tenses are made with two new verbs, '''esser''', ''`to be''' and '''afer''', ''`to have'''. They are irr
    52 KB (8,109 words) - 15:02, 15 October 2021
  • : '''muld''' "new": muld [ˈmul(d)] - mulda [ˈmuːlda] - mulds [ˈmuls] ...< *lososь), ''tjað'' (baby, < *čędo), ''sjer'' (gray, < *śěrь), ''muld'' (new, < *moldъ "young"), ''let'' (year, < *lěto), ''prætjel'' (friend, < *pri
    73 KB (10,742 words) - 21:18, 28 November 2023
  • ...the latter elsewhere. The Canarian dialect of Cinet (Tenerife) developed a new {{IPA|/ɕ/}} (and {{IPA|/ʑ/}}) by deaffricating the palatal affricates, e. ...is iromu '''dâ nova taviarna di vistimenta''''' "we were talking about the new clothing shop" → ''Parlantis '''an''' iromu'' "we were talking about it"
    124 KB (17,853 words) - 19:08, 1 November 2023
  • ...aced then all succeeding sentences will be in the particle's tense until a new particle appears, ''uź'' may be needed to clarify that a sentence does not
    31 KB (4,567 words) - 13:52, 17 April 2024
  • |c=en| new
    25 KB (4,655 words) - 17:41, 5 January 2018
  • | new || nij || נײַ || newydd || חדש ‎ || nēowe , nīwe || {{term|נו} ; Age: new, old
    32 KB (2,841 words) - 13:41, 10 January 2023
  • ...and Eastern Carpathian the auxiliary verb merged with the main verb into a new synthetic form, for example: ''skeistumbū́'' “he/she would read”. Des
    34 KB (4,987 words) - 17:04, 15 March 2023
  • ...e to Inanimate - To imply a place is untouched by living things (such as a new home), or to imply insult/hate to the noun.
    45 KB (5,466 words) - 19:52, 7 May 2024
  • |wrd062=''mănew'' ! new
    26 KB (4,014 words) - 01:47, 8 August 2019
  • ...ce the outdated writings from the sixth era. By 370, her work had led to a new interest in linguistics and ultimately to the founding of ''Tsagadhet Kepin ...is of derivational morphology and even the cases are utilized when forming new words. They are declined according to two numbers and nine cases, and the s
    68 KB (10,039 words) - 09:16, 19 July 2021
  • ..., the emperor came to be determined to launch an ambitious effort to reach new lands further east and colonize them. Although the results were disastrous ...hing) triggers an action. This voice increases the valency of a verb, as a new argument (the one that causes the action) is added to the original argument
    116 KB (20,392 words) - 03:15, 25 April 2020
  • ...nown mutations and other sandhi processes in the language. He developed a new romanization scheme show the complex sandhi processes that were represented ...ongoing correspondence as a dance: as new partners learning the steps of a new dance, they start out awkwardly, but with time and practice, their moves sy
    79 KB (12,283 words) - 11:55, 20 November 2022
  • ...vise the verb. Alternatively the subject is degraded to an oblique, and a new subject is introduced.
    33 KB (5,041 words) - 21:50, 4 July 2021
  • '''new''' ''adj.'' noja <br>
    28 KB (4,001 words) - 17:47, 26 August 2023
  • ...ion of my first such attempt, called Thaṣṙivṙal, but it became an entirely new language. As a result, Thaṣṙivṙal was rendered obsolete and essential ...-neu''' when conjugated. The causative is a very productive way of forming new verbs from other verbs, for example the causative of ''vēdī'' ('to see')
    75 KB (10,333 words) - 22:06, 4 July 2021
  • ...admitted, and the "ng" sound (as in English "sing") could be counted as a new sound, distinct from the conjunction of [n] + [g].</ref> To help language
    29 KB (4,305 words) - 22:01, 24 April 2021
  • | 183 || new || nieuw || nei || neu || ny || nýr || ny ||
    20 KB (2,535 words) - 00:39, 31 March 2024
  • ...mall> || focus infix, indicates its host is the focus of the sentence, the new information that is being claimed || '''''Vee<span style="color:blue">tui</
    49 KB (7,582 words) - 14:25, 8 February 2021
  • I stayed up so late that I heard the bells ring to mark the new day. New York City eý, āhñ'ihjadz'i are n'eíd' je t'áñxer ai āhsutx jál ez'e
    91 KB (16,959 words) - 23:14, 8 May 2024
  • ...semantic features, although discourse processes (e.g. the introduction of new arguments that are roughly equal in animacy with previously established arg # HOWEVER, if the new noun is topicalized with the clitic ''=si'', it is considered the agent.
    100 KB (14,709 words) - 20:22, 23 March 2024
  • ...erbs also had the past stem vowel changed from ''ia, iä'' to ''a, ä''. The new subclasses of class 1 are named 1a and 1b by analogy with the other subclas ...languages, but stronger than in Scandinavian. In the process it generated new instances of /rn/:
    69 KB (9,456 words) - 22:06, 10 November 2023
  • |new=
    31 KB (3,612 words) - 18:32, 30 March 2024
  • ...ending with ''tiǧis'', a further contraction has become standard, and the new suffix is shortened to ''tiǧi'', e.g. ''þrīs tiǧi fim'' ‘thirty-five� ...usand times larger than the previous term (whereas in the long scale, each new term is one million times larger). This is further confused by the now-stan
    118 KB (17,156 words) - 13:07, 4 May 2024
  • ...ange. Same prepositional stems have different ending consonants which give new meanings together with the case of the following word. Only prepositional a Aoma uses suffixes, gemination and apophony to create new words from existing ones. Same noun stems often occur in all four genders.
    75 KB (11,134 words) - 15:31, 20 July 2021
  • ...ipedia:risk_(game)|Risk]]; however, instead of taking place on Earth, this new game was to take place on an inter-planetary scale. The game creator wanted
    49 KB (6,682 words) - 23:42, 24 February 2023
  • ...ern border lies the Nez Percé Nation. Long considered a language isolate, new analyses has demonstrated it shares a common lineage with [[Minhast]] and [
    39 KB (5,360 words) - 02:53, 1 January 2024
  • # new ⇄ nue
    35 KB (4,741 words) - 14:53, 6 March 2024
  • The particles can be used in many combinations to create new tenses, moods, and aspects, but they must always be used in the very specif | new
    87 KB (13,480 words) - 15:12, 17 March 2022
  • |new || krim || ˈkɾim |new =
    75 KB (10,644 words) - 15:14, 6 July 2021
  • ...n of Indo-European from its daughter languages—which felt like an amazing new idea at the time, but which I now know as one of the most common sorts of c
    37 KB (5,737 words) - 05:27, 24 March 2020
  • ...inally there was a sizable community in the United States, concentrated in New York, but internal political developments, including the rise of xenophobia ...reated a straight-incision style. Additionally, the Salmon Speakers added new characters to represent sounds not represented in the original orthography,
    222 KB (33,454 words) - 20:33, 23 March 2024
  • : Rouzer, Paul. ''A New Practical Primer of Literary Chinese''. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University A ...ted Languages: Adventures in Linguistic Creativity, Madness, and Genius''. New York: Spiegel & Grau, 2010.
    39 KB (3,438 words) - 23:37, 30 March 2024
  • '''linntig''' ''a'' fresh, new '''niw''' ''a'' new
    53 KB (6,904 words) - 19:26, 23 February 2018
  • | Happy New Year
    35 KB (5,065 words) - 21:13, 30 January 2024
  • | 183||new||novus||novo||nuevo||nouveau||nuovo||nou|| {{term|nove}}
    20 KB (2,951 words) - 13:57, 26 April 2021
  • Armed with new knowledge and now speaking a radically altered language, the nation moved b ...did not have gender, and what little bits of gender there are in Rówok are new inventions picked up from contact with IE speakers. Even then, the language
    127 KB (18,443 words) - 10:27, 27 April 2024
  • || 183 || [[Contionary: chupi#Grayis|chupi]] || new
    50 KB (6,359 words) - 20:20, 30 March 2023
  • ...ology of composite words helps one memorize them and helps to understand a new word one has never heard before. But that does not mean one can skip the di |new = nuna
    70 KB (10,643 words) - 03:22, 20 January 2017
  • ...now can be placed before or after, such as ''ifanc'' and ''gimel'' (young/new and old). Adjectives are not inflected for the gender or number of the noun
    43 KB (6,749 words) - 10:05, 20 November 2023
  • ...ology of composite words helps one memorize them and helps to understand a new word one has never heard before. But that does not mean one can skip the di |new = nuna
    70 KB (10,697 words) - 08:52, 20 January 2017
  • ..., the double letters signify a change in stress, as though the unit were a new word. The same is true of the prefixed personal pronoun '''y/ry''' in '''ry
    40 KB (6,073 words) - 00:24, 14 February 2021
  • <tr><th>183</th><th>[[wiktionary:new|new]]</th><td>cusbe (''3''; cusboowi)</td></tr>
    97 KB (15,423 words) - 09:02, 19 February 2023
  • Some aspects are new, largely aiming towards simplification while remaining unique; the isolatin
    61 KB (10,033 words) - 09:44, 20 January 2017
  • |new
    27 KB (2,805 words) - 18:24, 14 April 2019
  • **New ''w'' also became ''v'', or ''f'' after voiceless consonants (e.g. '''βα�
    56 KB (6,587 words) - 07:50, 20 March 2024
  • The particles can be used in many combinations to create new tenses, moods, and aspects, but they must always be used in the very specif
    49 KB (7,060 words) - 11:45, 8 October 2018
  • | 183||new||нов‎ (nov)||нов‎ (nov)||nov||nov||ri||καινούργιος||no
    27 KB (2,630 words) - 21:57, 21 December 2018
  • | 183 || new || новъ‎ || nový || nowy || nový || nowy || nowy || новы‎ ||
    39 KB (2,232 words) - 19:03, 28 June 2023
  • |new |new
    78 KB (11,837 words) - 01:15, 23 May 2023
  • ...hereas the indefinite article introduces concepts, things, people that are new.
    59 KB (9,162 words) - 21:18, 4 July 2021
  • ! new
    40 KB (6,235 words) - 07:04, 26 September 2021
  • |''minro'' || min.rɔ || adj. || || non-old, young, new ||
    49 KB (7,402 words) - 12:58, 19 April 2019
  • Forms expressing a continuous enhancement are made by deriving new verbs with the ''naš-'' prefix, e.g. ''yaiva pārṇame našñæñuchlire'
    61 KB (9,721 words) - 16:04, 11 June 2021
  • ...n: left;"| '''''[[Contionary: raebh#Modern Standard Imperial|raebh]]''''' ‘new’ | new
    89 KB (11,750 words) - 15:18, 30 June 2022
  • * '''Cassowary:''' A big flightless bird native to tropical forests of New Guinea, nearby islands and northeastern Australia. [466] ...hat can be subdivided into two distinct groups, Old World coral snakes and New World coral snakes. [2240]
    144 KB (22,010 words) - 13:31, 15 January 2024
  • ...We'll have all of the old teams, as well as another set of teams with the new person!"
    41 KB (6,731 words) - 19:01, 18 March 2024
  • | 183||new||جديد , حديث||jadīd , ħadīth||חדש||ħâðâš||ܚܕܬܐ||ħa
    36 KB (3,469 words) - 21:35, 28 June 2023
  • ...his may have to change if I bring ı back into the language in light of the new rules surrounding i-umlaut and first umlaut. TBD...</small>''
    74 KB (10,551 words) - 15:28, 17 March 2022
  • ...:Ethnologue|Ethnologue]] and [[w:Glottolog|Glottolog]] group Luthic into a new language group, the Gotho-Romance (''opere citato'') family is still somewh ...known as mercenaries and traders now came as invaders and eventually as a new ruling elite, even in Italy itself, beginning with [[w:Odoacer|Odoacer]]’
    242 KB (34,997 words) - 11:48, 7 May 2024
  • |new = námô
    113 KB (15,881 words) - 21:04, 4 July 2021
  • ...jectives form an open class of words, that is, it is relatively common for new adjectives to be formed via such processes as derivation.
    73 KB (10,273 words) - 12:05, 1 November 2023
  • With the new knowledge of other cultures and the entire universe outside of Qu, neologis
    113 KB (16,512 words) - 14:32, 8 February 2021
  • ...tive) is also affected by an irregular development, yielding ''-îm''. This new suffix can be regularly applied to words with irregular 'superlatives' in S # The '-es' ending is applied to the new consonant-ending noun (even though the '-s' suffix might have been used ori
    315 KB (43,887 words) - 01:06, 16 April 2020
  • ...vene. They came from their realm, 'Ƕakꜥité, and carried the seeds into the new oceans, utilising the inherent magick to join them. They then placed many p
    67 KB (4,561 words) - 11:37, 6 May 2024
  • ....'' aged (''base word describing the relative age of an object in degrees: new:old'').<br> ...tionary: yuhneewuhzle#Brooding|yuhneewuhzle]]''' /[jʌ.ni.wʌz.lɛ]/ ''adj.'' new.<br>
    229 KB (37,759 words) - 22:43, 14 November 2023
  • ...omentesa|novo]], ''Mer.:'' [[Contionary: núbu#Merineth|núbu]]) ''adj.'' '''new.''' <br />
    121 KB (18,056 words) - 18:12, 4 January 2023
  • ....'' aged (''base word describing the relative age of an object in degrees: new:old'').<br> ...tionary: yuhneewuhzle#Brooding|yuhneewuhzle]]''' /[jʌ.ni.wʌz.lɛ]/ ''adj.'' new.<br>
    232 KB (37,978 words) - 04:24, 7 February 2024
  • |new
    54 KB (9,527 words) - 22:01, 28 January 2015
  • ...vise the verb. Alternatively the subject is degraded to an oblique, and a new subject is introduced.
    111 KB (16,296 words) - 20:44, 4 July 2021
  • <tr><td>96</td><td>[[new]]</td>
    87 KB (11,913 words) - 00:23, 11 September 2022
  • With the new knowledge of other cultures and the entire universe outside of Qu, neologis
    156 KB (22,169 words) - 02:34, 26 January 2023
  • '''[[Contionary: dweg#Maltcégj|dweg]]''' {{IPA| /dwɛg/}} ''adj.'' new.<br>
    160 KB (29,642 words) - 13:45, 8 March 2022
  • ...ered to be this morpheme), while the latter two are still somewhat used in new coinings. All four morphemes are used with the zero-grade (''ślūtya'') ro
    118 KB (18,060 words) - 12:22, 4 May 2024
  • ...pūrja''<br/>Northeast || half-translation from Cerian ''Ézélonía Opeuso'' (New Ézélonía)
    207 KB (31,728 words) - 13:18, 2 September 2021
  • ...e most common overall in Chlouvānem, and are the preferred way of crafting new words. These are endocentric compounds, the last element, the head of the c
    139 KB (21,561 words) - 13:12, 2 September 2021