Sentence examples for dialects whose from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Lithuanian is sharply divided into dialects whose differences are quite marked.

Although Hieroglyphic Luwian is more widely attested than Cuneiform Luwian, radical revisions in the understanding of many hieroglyphic signs have shown that the two written forms of the language represent two very similar dialects whose precise relationship requires further research.

The Romany languages are spoken by more than three million individuals worldwide, and the more remotely related Domari group of dialects (whose speakers seem to have been the ones to have been given the name gypsy, and also Spanish gitano, French gitan, from Greek Aigyptiakós 'Egyptian') by another two and a half million throughout North Africa and West Asia.

Similar(57)

The book's greatest problem is the prose itself -- a vague po' folks dialect whose most marked characteristic is the elimination of "-ing," as in "She was moppin' and cussin'".

The Coke ad doesn't have a celebrity, but it does have an idea: "America the Beautiful," with its lyrics variously sung in nine different languages (Spanish, Mandarin, Tagalog, Hebrew, Arabic, Hindi, Senegalese-French, Keres — a Native American dialect whose remaining speakers number about ten thousand — and English).

Jan Haydn Rowles is an accent and dialect coach whose interest in dialect began when she noticed how her parents who were born in different counties spoke with different accents; and that the same was true of her and her siblings.

Innu, also called Montagnais and Naskapi, North American Indian peoples who spoke almost identical Algonquian dialects and whose cultures differed chiefly in their adaptation to their respective environments.

That's because Mr. Gabis is a go-to dialect coach whose craft can be heard on Broadway and beyond.

Majella Hurley, a dialect coach whose theater and film résumé includes the recent revival of "Journey's End," helped Ms. Danes, Mr. Mays, Boyd Gaines and the rest of the "Pygmalion" cast learn several different British dialects.

February 22 , 1801Bagber, England October 7, 1886 William Barnes, (born Feb. 22, 1801, Bagber, near Sturminster Newton, Dorsetshire, Eng. died Oct. 7, 1886, Winterbourne Came, Dorsetshire) English dialect poet whose work gives a vivid picture of the life and labour of rural southwestern England and includes some moving expressions of loss and grief, such as "The Wife A-Lost" and "Woak Hill".

William Barnes, (born Feb. 22, 1801, Bagber, near Sturminster Newton, Dorsetshire, Eng. died Oct. 7, 1886, Winterbourne Came, Dorsetshire) English dialect poet whose work gives a vivid picture of the life and labour of rural southwestern England and includes some moving expressions of loss and grief, such as "The Wife A-Lost" and "Woak Hill".

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