Nutritionists and fitness gurus have created an entire lexicon based on fruits to describe common body types. |
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The rabbis in their pulpits and the kadis in their mosques have erased the word from their lexicon. |
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The sources, however, have disappeared in the severe abridgement which has reduced the lexicon to a glossary, copious though that remains. |
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In the first, called intrinsic reflexivization, a predicate is marked as a reflexive predicate in the lexicon. |
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The book is structured like a typical lexicon with topics listed alphabetically in each section. |
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I'm learning a whole new vocabulary, a secret lexicon known only to amputees and prosthetists. |
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This may be a consequence of abnormally rapid decay of lexemes in the phonological output lexicon. |
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About 135 km into the day, I learnt another valuable definition in the lexicon of cycling language. |
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Calling Potter a writer undermines a great deal of the depth and dynamics he brought to the lexicon of language. |
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The terms represent both old and new in the modern lexicon of Cockney rhyming slang. |
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In mentioning the range of the rhetorical lexicon we are not simply talking about lists of tropes and figures. |
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William Gibson couldn't have guessed how the word he invented would breed and infect the lexicon. |
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This theory represents a written word in the mental lexicon as a network of semantic, orthographic, and phonological features. |
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The first route involves direct connections between a written word and its location in the orthographic lexicon. |
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These iconographies dictate the semantics of his copper extracts and moderate to become the lexicon of his visual language. |
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We conclude that sophisticated numerical competence can be present in the absence of a well-developed lexicon of number words. |
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Your lexicon was the modern language of Scottish business, not the old Labour view of by-gone coalmines and steelworks. |
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His living lexicon of the English language, coupled with his incredible intellect, made life electric for those around him. |
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Before you do anything else, unpack the language lexicon and speech database. |
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In addition the German missionaries also produced Tulu lexicon and Tulu-English dictionary. |
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The celebrated Brown, Driver and Briggs Hebrew lexicon presents the two roots as follows. |
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At once foggy and focused, the media lexicon of self-justification rolls on. |
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One of the most distinctive expressions in the chicken lexicon occurs when my fowls spot a bird of prey. |
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They are listed in the lexicon, but an error in the morphological or morphophonological system prevents the parser from recognising them. |
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Once again the title of the film serves as a vehicle for the introduction of ufological terminology into the public lexicon. |
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The explicit internal representation of vowelized word forms in the lexicon may be useful to provide an automatic method to vowelize transcripts. |
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These results suggest that the acquisition of phonological skills is a necessary step in building the orthographic lexicon. |
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He is engraved in the world's pop culture lexicon, absorbed via osmosis by each new generation. |
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The second stage is characterized as a period of change in syntax and morphology yet stability in lexicon and fluency. |
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It requires expansion of our emotional lexicon, distinguishing sensitivity from oversensitivity. |
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As the lexicon expands, the clumsy but motivated compounds and periphrastic expressions disappear. |
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In my lexicon, coitus reservatus requires non-ejaculation, whereas coitus interruptus allows it, but outside the partner. |
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The concept of corporate culture is firmly implanted in the lexicon of management. |
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Only at a later stage in its development does the pidgin develop productive internal resources for expanding its lexicon. |
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Ostensibly neutral, each of these words has a positive connotation in the American political lexicon. |
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They have their own lexicon of heady-scented concoctions like chews and gobstoppers, Flying Saucers and Black Jacks. |
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Like a language, the military art has its own lexicon, grammar, and syntax. |
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Terrorists, suitcase bombs, anthrax, radiological dirty bombs, and improvised explosive devices dominate the new strategic lexicon. |
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The phrase became part of the lexicon and the media became like an echo chamber. |
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The term entered the political lexicon as a word synonymous with corruption and scandal, yet the Watergate Hotel is one of Washington's plushest hotels. |
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If only these people realized how many other Arabic-based words are part of our daily lexicon. |
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In the lexicon of chronobiology, the science of body time, Dave is an owl and I'm a lark, and learning how to deal with the difference can turn you into a top performer. |
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It seems from the neologistic lexicon that most branches of medicine can now have a telecoms component, from teleradiology and telepathology to telenursing and telepsychiatry. |
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The dire need for money is a constant concern for Lucy in the I Love Lucy plot lexicon, and this is one of the better examples of scheming gone sour. |
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A conlang is defined by its system of grammar, not its lexicon. |
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Single-parent, same-sex, and common-law families barely penetrated public consciousness, much less the Hebrew lexicon. |
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Those who are not versed in the lexicon are often left confused, frustrated, and misunderstood. |
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Respondents in both groups typically viewed their personal lexicon as containing less than 40,000 words, and the size of their active vocabulary as no more than 20,000 words. |
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Time itself was changed and months from the revolutionary calendar, denoting crucial events in Thermidor or Brumaire, were also added to the lexicon. |
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There is another aspect of Arcady that is more difficult to describe, but which owes primarily to the disarming simplicity of the book's lexicon and spareness of its phrasing. |
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They would just never consider looking it up in a dictionary or a lexicon. |
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The programmer will need to enter, laboriously, for each word in the system's lexicon, the different senses and the associated encyclopaedic knowledge. |
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In any case, rules, whether variable or categorial, and the idiosyncratic marking of forms in the lexicon, are not available options in a Cognitive Grammar. |
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Now, it's hard to know exactly when flip-flopping first became a dirty word in the leadership lexicon. |
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It may be a relative newcomer to the cosmetic surgery lexicon, but microdermabrasion is already on the lips of millions of women and men worldwide. |
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Competent readers are able to recognize and directly retrieve words from an orthographic lexicon consisting of a large number of memory representations of word spellings. |
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The phonological output lexicon stores pronunciations corresponding to all the spoken words known to the reader, also in the form of lexical entries. |
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Into the dustbin with them went a whole lexicon of language. |
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This week I also gave a lot of thought to many of the sayings in our lexicon that need updating. |
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Just as inhabitants of different regions of the country have dialects and language unique to them, Alaskans have a lexicon of their own that can be baffling to cheechakos. |
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Sheepraising has a large lexicon of unique terms which vary considerably by region and dialect. |
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The only way you can stop the zombies is by unscrambling the words from the zombie lexicon. |
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Tolkien have argued that Celtic has acted as a substrate to English for both the lexicon and syntax. |
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Such words whose polarities are determined using WordNet are added to positive and negative list of General lexicon. |
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Some scholars have suggested that there is more evidence in the grammar than in the lexicon, though this is challenged by many. |
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To heroicize modernism or celebrate its strength and verticality was foreign to his lexicon. |
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In generative linguistics, a lexis or lexicon is the complete set of all possible words in a language. |
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In this sense, child, children, child's and children's are four different words in the English lexicon. |
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Terms like swing loans with balloon payments and seller participation became part of the real estate deal-making lexicon. |
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While the language's grammatical base is from K'iche', its lexicon is supplied by Kaqchikel. |
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However, in creoles, the core lexicon often has mixed origin, and the grammar is largely original. |
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The lexicon of a pidgin is usually small and drawn from the vocabularies of its speakers, in varying proportions. |
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The contact influences what loanwords are integrated into the lexicon and which certain words are chosen over others. |
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Johnson's dictionary was the first to comprehensively document the English lexicon. |
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The book is to be the inaugurator of a series devoted to Rand on major themes in the philosophical lexicon. |
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However, when a sound change is initiated, it often expands to the whole lexicon given enough time, though not always. |
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It contains many phrases which have entered the common English lexicon, either on their own or as quoted in other works. |
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I read through the dictionary five times to extract an extensive lexicon of univocal words containing only one of the five vowels. |
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The words constituting idioms are stored as catenae in the lexicon, and as such, they are concrete units of syntax. |
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This girlfriend talk is produced through a combination of womantic lexicon, therapy talk, and feminine consumption. |
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Idioms are lexical items, which means they are stored as catenae in the lexicon. |
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Sleep driving, not to he confused with drowsy driving, has been recently added to the lexicon of sleep medicine and phenomena of sleepwalking. |
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Let us pass now from a consideration of lexicon to that of morpheme analysis, as practised by linguicists. |
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A hypothetical history of how words become part of the colloquial lexicon. |
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In the Minimalist model, the lexicon has taken on a greater role in the grammar than it had in earlier generative grammar theory. |
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His influence on philosophical thinking lasted until the Middle Ages, as is shown by citation in the Suda, the massive medieval lexicon. |
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Australian English is a major variety of the language with a distinctive accent and lexicon, and differs slightly from other varieties of English in grammar and spelling. |
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While Cottolene and Vegetal have passed from the commercial lexicon, Wesson Oil, Ivory Soap, Lifebuoy, and Crisco have endured as familiar cottonseed products. |
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But in the local lexicon it has come to mean a bottled fizzy drink. |
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Nuance, you sense, is not in the OMA lexicon, though irony clearly is. |
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Nay, what is your Montesquieu himself but a clever infant spelling Letters from a hieroglyphical prophetic Book, the lexicon of which lies in Eternity, in Heaven? |
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The concept spread through English and later British colonisation and is now rooted in the legal lexicon of the other 15 independent realms and the three Crown dependencies. |
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German dialects, traditional local varieties traced back to the Germanic tribes, are distinguished from varieties of standard German by their lexicon, phonology, and syntax. |
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As a consequence Indian languages were changed greatly, with the large scale entry of Persian and its many Arabic loans into the Gujarati lexicon. |
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The West Riding dialect of Hughes's childhood remained a staple of his poetry, his lexicon lending a texture that is concrete, terse, emphatic, economical yet powerful. |
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Although Cantonese shares some vocabulary with Mandarin, the two varieties are mutually unintelligible because of differences in pronunciation, grammar and lexicon. |
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I call it the New Racism lexicon, which takes straightforward words and rejiggers them with insidious new meanings that express the same prejudices, just less overtly. |
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In a language, the array of arbitrary signs connected to specific meanings is called the lexicon, and a single sign connected to a meaning is called a lexeme. |
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The work only survives in some 374 fragments, by far the majority being quoted in the geographical lexicon Ethnika compiled by Stephanus of Byzantium. |
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Tangerian, as the residents refer to their language, is different from the rest of Morocco, with a lexicon derived from Berber, Spanish, English, and old Tangerian words. |
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The latter is widely used in the Maluku Islands as a second language and is a simplified form of Indonesian language with additions of the local lexicon. |
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Lexical morphology is the branch of morphology that deals with the lexicon, which, morphologically conceived, is the collection of lexemes in a language. |
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The result is a split, by source language, between lexicon and grammar. |
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The Internet, television, movies and popular music have all brought international influences into New Zealand society and the New Zealand lexicon. |
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Turns, twists, walks, runs, falls, and somersaults, along with many other movements, are the specific vocabularic elements which make up the lexicon of dance. |
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The priority of the lexicon is also sustained by so-called pregrammatical communication as it is found, for example, in child pidgin and agrammatical aphasia. |
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The Institute is essentially using body art as a vehicle to introduce exotic terms like sacred geometry and transhumanism into the lexicon of popular culture. |
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