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In some Turkic languages, words can be harmonized according to whether the vowels and the uvular/velar consonants have "front" or "back" articulation [ 20].
There is a widely discussed no-go theorem by Malament (1996) with the following proposed interpretation: Even the quantum mechanics of one single particle can only be consonant with the locality principle of special relativity theory in the framework of a field theory, such as QFT.
What can be done must be consonant with the political culture.
Our results (predictive values) can be viewed as being consonant with findings (correlation levels) mentioned above [ 4, 5], even if our SPs were untrained in evaluating the trainees.
For two-consonant clusters, the following restrictions obtain: a palatalized consonant can be preceded only by another palatalized consonant or sometimes by /ɢ/ and /ʃ/ * /ŋ/ may precede only /ʃ, x, ɡ, ɡʲ/ and /ɢ/ * /j/ does not seem to appear in second position * /p/ and /pʲ/ do not occur as first consonant and as second consonant only if preceded by /m/ or /ɮ/ or their palatalized counterparts.
Accounting for all possible intervals is essential to our argument and essential to understanding the historical fact that intervals between any two scale tones can be heard as consonant or dissonant and affect the overall appeal of the scale [28], [29].
The main idea of these algorithms is that all the syllables have a vowel as a nucleus, and this vowel can be surrounded by consonants, semi-vowels (or glides), or other vowels.
For the most part, a vowel can be attached to a consonant or left standing on its own just outside of the main line of the word at the writer's will.
If the resulting closed test procedure is consonant and Algorithm 3 can be used to perform the test.
Most consonants can be doubled between vowels.
Vowels and consonants can be considered to be the segments of which speech is composed.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com