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Stress is marked by a accut accent in their respective vowel, words that have stress in the penultimate syllable aren't mark, monosyllables are not mark either. | Stress is marked by a accut accent in their respective vowel, words that have stress in the penultimate syllable aren't mark, monosyllables are not mark either. | ||
There are several words that are pronounced as if they were part of the next (prepositions) or previous word (postpositions), | There are several words that are pronounced as if they were part of the next (prepositions) or previous word (postpositions), most are prepositions, conjunctions, etcetera, in the dictionary these words are marked with a grave accent, for example, "dè", "èt" and "mènte" (when they join the following word, the grave accent is placed at the end and at the beginning if they join the previous one). | ||
Consonants can often be pronounced separately, for example, "met-so" /ˈme̞t.so̞/, for this, can to use either a dash or a diaeresis ("metsö"), this can (" | Consonants can often be pronounced separately, for example, "met-so" /ˈme̞t.so̞/, for this, can to use either a dash or a diaeresis ("metsö"), this can ("fùṡäl" vs "fut-sál") or not ("célyïtron" vs "cél-yitron") affect the representation of stress, unless the umlaut is used instead of the dash, for this, either the grave accent (fùṡál) or the double accent can be used (fuţa̋l). | ||
==Symbols and signs== | ==Symbols and signs== | ||
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