PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «EXCRESCENTLY»
excrescently ·
excrescently ·
cres ·
cent ·
growing ·
abnormally ·
excessively ·
superfluously ·
linguistics ·
relating ·
epenthesis ·
epenthetic ·
phonetics ·
speech ·
sound ·
inserted ·
added ·
result ·
articulatory ·
interaction ·
impetus ·
sense ·
sents ·
against ·
from ·
middle ·
define ·
collins ·
always ·
adjective ·
denoting ·
resembling ·
abnormal ·
outgrowth ·
uselessly ·
essential ·
superfluous ·
words ·
that ·
with ·
word ·
finder ·
list ·
search ·
official ·
ending ·
letter ·
enter ·
generate ·
power ·
definitions ·
voted ·
phrases ·
otiosely ·
meaning ·
what ·
anagrams ·
urban ·
excrementuously ·
excremished ·
excrenet ·
excrepades ·
excrephobia ·
10 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «EXCRESCENTLY»
Scopri l'uso di
excrescently nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
excrescently e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
1
The Bright Country: A Fisherman's Return to Trout, Wild ...
... the distance had disappeared behind the gray bellies of passing clouds,
making the mountains look like dark shards of stone strewn excrescently about
the sky, the slagheaps of the planet's history, another of creation's interesting
boneyards ...
... EXCORIATIONS EXCREMENT EXCREMENTITIOUS EXCREMENTITIOUSLY
EXCREMENTS EXCRESCENCE EXCRESCENCES EXCRESCENCIES
EXCRESCENCY EXCRESCENT EXCRESCENTLY EXCRETA EXCRETAL
EXCRETE ...
Maliha Mendoza Mahmood,
2013
The excursus on that absurd hobbyhorse of Ruskin, the 'pathetic fallacy', hangs
somewhat excrescently on an otherwise clean, well-argued account of the elegy.
Tennyson's dramatic monologues receive attention from William Fredeman in a ...
The excursus on that absurd hobbyhorse of Ruskin, the 'pathetic fallacy', hangs
somewhat excrescently on an otherwise clean, well-argued account of the elegy.
Tennyson's dramatic monologues receive attention from William Fredeman in a ...
University of Cape Town, Its,
1982
5
Leaflets of Philippine Botany
... or widest portion, tapering from the small base, the top portion or side
excrescently ridged about the short blunt calyx point, tawny appressed pubescent
all over; seeds murinus, 3 mm. across, angularly rounded, smooth or obscurely
rugose.
6
Multilingual Australia: resources, needs, policies
Also, accents are sometimes deleted and sometimes added excrescently.
Examples of direct graphemic transference are: (i) transference of phoneme-
grapheme relations, e.g. (oo) for (u) — as in: toocha, for: dwcha; (ii) replacement
of ...
7
Sri Aurobindo, a critical introduction
He was not blind to the follies and superstitions that had excrescently spread
over the pure springs of Indian thought, but he also saw the possibility of
cleansing the old and rearing a new world on the authentic foundations of our
culture.
8
Modern speech: an introduction to speaking and understanding
Once the [r] is attached to law, it may cling excrescently even when the context
changes, as in state lawr. The stock example is idear. EXERCISES i. Copy and fill
in the transcriptions in the second column and pronounce without the intrusive ...
Gladys Louise Borchers, Claude Merton Wise,
1947
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF VALLEY SPEECH* The [r] is normally
pronounced, often excrescently in the words wash and Washington, [warf] and ['
war fin tan], and sometimes in daughter and water. Occasionally [arl], [tarlat], [f3rs]
, and ...
Louise Pound, Kemp Malone, Arthur Garfield Kennedy,
1937
10
Teaching English overseas: an introduction
[d] is added excrescently after final n and r, as [gand, gaeund] for gown, ['skdlad]
for scholar. [k] initially ~ [kx] as in cut [kxat]. This is a type of over-aspiration which
results in the production of the affricate [kx]. [k] medially and finally ~ p], as in ...
Sandra McKay, Sandra Lee McKay,
1992