-
glossing abbreviation(s) (help);
pjato POSS.2PL kan-te child-COL iriri-
ø-ro run-2-CLV n-e-re 3-DECL-AUX
pjato kan-te iriri-
ø-ro n-e-re POSS.2PL child-COL...
-
other quirk is that he only eats
things that end in the
letter '
O', such as Cheerios, Jell-
O, and
flamingo meat.
After Carter moves into
Brooklyn House, Khufu...
-
citation form.
Bulgarian verbs are
conjugated using the formula: v e r b f
o r m = stem +
thematic vowel +
inflectional suffix {\displaystyle \mathrm {verb\...
- nes-e-te)
except the 1st
person sing. (nes-u < *nes-
ǫ) and the 3rd
person plur. (nes-ou < †nes-ú < *nes-
ǫ-tъ). 1)
reduced imperative endings used in most...
-
Central Transylvanian sub-dialects. See
Romanian phonology Russian пять /
pjatʹ [pʲætʲ] 'five'
Allophone of /a/
between palatalized consonants. See Russian...
- instance, de (of) and por (by;
formerly per)
combine with the
definite articles o and a (masculine and
feminine forms of "the" respectively),
producing do,...
-
Archived from the
original on 21
January 2021.
Retrieved 28
April 2014. "
Pjatʹ genofondov pjati subètnosov
sibirskih tatar" Пять генофондов пяти субэтносов...
- palatal,
vowels a,
o, e, i all
merge as [ɪ]: t'až'ólyj [tʲɪˈʐolɨj] "heavy", v'el'ík'ij [vʲɪˈlʲikʲɪj] "big".
After non-palatal,
vowels a and
o merge as [ɐ] directly...
- some
native names,
Croatian has -ik
where Serbian and
Montenegrin have -(
o)nik (kisik–kiseonik "oxygen", vodik–vodonik "hydrogen"), and
Bosnian accepts...
- seen in the
following examples: /kwat/ = "how much" vs /kuˈat/ = "brooded" /
pjat/ = "dish" vs /piˈat/ = "bitten" Locally, the
alveolar fricative [s] is replaced...