Sentence examples for whose dialect from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

He no longer complained about Berry or his classmates, whose dialect he could barely understand.

A breathless encounter, as the Viennese — whose dialect, after all, is replete with double meanings — absorbed with a shudder of ecstasy the aesthetics of the swastika.

To play Mr. Lauda, whose dialect and blunt manner are known to millions through his televised racing commentary, Mr. Bruehl studied with a Viennese coach, who put a proper Austrian finish on his English.

The Bzyb Abkhaz, who have a distinct dialect, are found around the Bzyb River; the Abzhui Abkhaz, on whose dialect the literary language is based, live near the Kodori River; and the Zamurzakan Abkhaz are found in the southeast.

Similar(54)

23 Neediest Cases 26 OBITUARIES 18-19 Nicola Paone A restaurant owner and singer whose dialect-inflected songs about the joys, sorrows and insecurities of Italian immigrants sold millions of records and made him "the Italian Bing Crosby," he was 88. 18 Chess 26 Weather 15.

Nicola Paone, whose dialect-inflected songs about the joys, sorrows and insecurities of Italian immigrants sold millions of records and made him "the Italian Bing Crosby," died on Dec. 25 in Albuquerque, said Lawrence Auriana, his friend and longtime neighbor in Scarsdale, N.Y.

This grouping is caused either by geographic obstacles that arrest the diffusion of a number of innovations along the same line or by historical circumstances, such as political borders of long standing, or by migrations that have brought into contact two populations whose dialects were developed in noncontiguous areas.

To some that kind of reverie is as worthy of scorn as situationist Guy Debord championing the Roma as fork‑tongued rebels, rhetorical refuseniks whose dialects helped them avoid capture by straight society: "The Gypsies rightly contend that one is never obliged to speak the truth except in one's own language; in the enemy's language the lie must reign".

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).

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

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