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  • ...ews/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t29 '''''Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language'''''] ...ting, [[etymology]], [[pidgin]], [[poetry]], [[sexism]], [[Shakespeare]]'s language, and [[slang]]. Features include pieces on place-names, borrowings from oth
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  • ...ish language, [[tradition]]al [[culture]] and English Literature. Covers [[English]], American and Commonwealth writers. Its sources are [[Books]], [[periodic
    648 bytes (85 words) - 23:32, 12 December 2020
  • ...sewanee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t140 '''''The Oxford Dictionary of English (2nd edition revised)'''''] ...[[language]]. It is at the forefront of language [[research]], focusing on English as it is used today, and has a unique defining style, with the modern [[mea
    669 bytes (93 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • ...og.sewanee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t30 '''''Pocket Fowler's Modern English Usage'''''] ...nglish, the new edition answers your most frequently asked questions about language use.
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  • ...eatures expanded coverage of foreign language proverbs currently in use in English. With an emphasis on examples of usage, including the earliest written evid
    886 bytes (120 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • '''''[https://0-www.oed.com.catalog.sewanee.edu/ Oxford English Dictionary]''''' ...onary of English in the world. It is also the definitive record of English language development, tracing the evolution of more than 600,000 words over the last
    652 bytes (83 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • ...reference.com.catalog.sewanee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t145a (Irish-English)] ...ry is intended for learners of Irish and for all those interested in the [[language]].
    577 bytes (76 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...oxfordreference.com.catalog.sewanee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t145b (English-Irish)] ...ry is intended for learners of Irish and for all those interested in the [[language]].
    576 bytes (76 words) - 02:01, 13 December 2020
  • ....oxfordreference.com.catalog.sewanee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t66b (English-Italian)] ...mar]]. Including complete coverage of contemporary idiomatic Italian and [[English]], both written and spoken, The Pocket Oxford Italian Dictionary covers the
    1 KB (135 words) - 02:34, 13 December 2020
  • ...reference.com.catalog.sewanee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t131a (Latin-English)] ...st years of studying Latin, as well as those with an interest in the Latin language or the classical world.
    633 bytes (88 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...oxfordreference.com.catalog.sewanee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t131b (English-Latin)] ...ears of studying [[Latin]], as well as those with an interest in the Latin language or the classical world.
    638 bytes (88 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...atalog.sewanee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t23 '''''The Concise Oxford English Dictionary'''''] ...yday words including scientific and technical [[vocabulary]], as well as [[English]] from around the world. This revised edition of the dictionary has been up
    868 bytes (111 words) - 23:43, 12 December 2020
  • ...other regional varieties and constituting [[together]] with them a single language <the Doric dialect of ancient [[Greek]]> :c : a variety of a [[language]] used by the members of a [[group]] <such dialects as [[politics]] and adv
    4 KB (579 words) - 00:53, 13 December 2020
  • A corpus may contain texts in a single language (monolingual corpus) or text data in multiple languages (multilingual corpu ...(base) form of each word. When the language of the corpus is not a working language of the researchers who use it, interlinear glossing is usedto make the anno
    3 KB (383 words) - 19:45, 29 April 2008
  • ....sewanee.edu/views/BOOK_SEARCH.html?book=t28 '''''The Oxford Dictionary of English Grammar'''''] ...[[phonetics]] and transformational grammar, are accompanied by examples of language in use, and frequent quotations from existing works on grammar.
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  • ...elected by leading Slavic scholars in the USA who carefully guided English language translations. CDPSP Digital Archive paints a broad picture of life in Sovie
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  • ...he result of thorough research into the language and Oxford's unparalleled language resources.
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  • ...some extent variable, compared with mostly [[analytic]] languages such as English, which has lost the ancient noun-case system inherited from [[Proto-Indo-Eu ...y words adapted from Latin are found in other modern languages—including [[English]], half of whose vocabulary is derived, directly or indirectly, from Latin.
    3 KB (463 words) - 01:24, 13 December 2020
  • ...N_PERIOD Old English] rǣdelse [[opinion]], conjecture, riddle; akin to Old English rǣdan to [[interpret]] — more at [[read]] ...are problems generally [[expressed]] in [[metaphorical]] or allegorical [[language]] that require ingenuity and careful [[thinking]] for their solution, and c
    1 KB (198 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...th century. The first attestation of ''gullibility'' known to the [[Oxford English Dictionary]] appears in 1793, and ''gullible'' in 1825. The OED gives gulli ...pear in the 1900 [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_English_Dictionary New English Dictionary].
    3 KB (451 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French jargun, gargon *1a : [[confused]] unintelligible [[language]]
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  • ...ew up bilingual in Welsh and [[English]], which influenced his approach to language education. ...tron of the International Association of Teachers of English as a Foreign Language (IATEFL).
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  • Fluency is a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_language_pathology speech language pathology] term that means the smoothness or [[flow]] with which [[sounds]] ...rategies, and inaccurate word use. They may be illiterate, as well. Native language speakers are often incorrectly referred to as fluent.
    3 KB (492 words) - 01:20, 13 December 2020
  • ...nearly three centuries. Arguably the most influential single document for English literary studies, this fully searchable online version presents the full te ...the whole Church. It is arguably the most influential single document for English literary studies. The text of the ‘He’ version contained here comprises
    1 KB (191 words) - 01:24, 13 December 2020
  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] blǣdsian (preserved in the Northumbrian dialect around 950 AD).[1] The te ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] during the [[process]] of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianization
    2 KB (292 words) - 23:40, 12 December 2020
  • ...A motto may be in any [[language]], but Latin is the most used. The local language is usual in the mottos of [[governments]]. In [[English]] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_heraldry Scottish heraldry] m
    2 KB (313 words) - 01:24, 13 December 2020
  • The word entered the [[English]] language in the seventeenth century, from the [[Greek]] word, ἀνθολογία (a ...d textual excerpts. Shortly before anthology had entered the [[language]], English had begun using "[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miscellany miscellany]" as
    2 KB (365 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • A corpus may contain texts in a single [[language]] (monolingual corpus) or text [[data]] in multiple languages (multilingual ...(base) form of each word. When the language of the corpus is not a working language of the researchers who use it, interlinear glossing is used to make the ann
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  • '''''Encyclopedia of Philosophy''''', the ten volume [[English]]-language reference source for [[philosophy]]," has been the cornerstone of the philo
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  • *'''''[https://english.oxforddictionaries.com/ Oxford Dictionaries Online]''''' Modern English dictionary and language reference service with detailed writing, grammar, and spelling guidance.
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  • ...is the conversion into written, typewritten or printed form, of a spoken [[language]] source, such as the [[proceedings]] of a [[court]] hearing. It can also m ...honetic transcription of the name of the former Russian president known in English as Boris Yeltsin, followed by accepted hybrid forms in various languages. N
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  • ...rd. For example, [[Latin]] candidus, which means "white", is the etymon of English candid. ...tracing it and its cognates to a common [[ancestral]] form in an ancestral language.
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  • Digitized collection of 150,000 English and foreign language books, pamphlets, broadsides and other ephemera published in the U.K. and t The collection is an ongoing project based on The English Short Title Catalogue (ESTC), a machine-readable union list of the holdings
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  • ...h]] revealers have been authorized to [[translate]] into the [[English]] [[language]] of [[Urantia]]. ...ce new terms only when the concept to be portrayed finds no terminology in English which can be employed to convey such a new concept partially or even with m
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  • ...hese and hundreds of other questions that bedevil those who care about the language. Garner draws on a host of evidence to support his judgements, citing thous
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French, from ''heriter'' to inherit, from Late Latin ''heredit ...nd [[artifacts]]), intangible culture (such as folklore, [[traditions]], [[language]], and [[knowledge]]), and natural heritage (including culturally-significa
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English], from Late Latin, from [[Greek]] martyr-, martys [[witness]] ...ing]] and/or [[death]]. The term, in this later sense, entered the English language as a loanword. The death of a martyr or the value attributed to it is calle
    2 KB (325 words) - 01:26, 13 December 2020
  • Medieval Latin terminus term, [[expression]] (from [[Latin]], limit) + [[English]] -o- + -logy ...ge]]''''', follow [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Language '''''this link'''''].</center>
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] natif, from Middle French, from [[Latin]] nativus, from natus, past partic ...fly Australian : having a usually superficial resemblance to a specified [[English]] plant or [[animal]]
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  • ...ve]] tasks. In American English, this includes shop staff, but in British English, such people are known as shop assistants and are not considered to be cler
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] cowardise, from Anglo-French coardise, from cuard ...ords of French [[origin]], this [[word]] was introduced in the [[English]] language by the French-speaking Normans, after the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] dōn to do ...wn [[native]] [[language]], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_English Old English], to [[express]] the '''''dooms''''', or [[laws]] and [[judgement]]s, which
    3 KB (500 words) - 01:07, 13 December 2020
  • ...ry, who are often simply referred to as "Chinese" or "ethnic Chinese" in [[English]]. ==Chinese-language terms==
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  • ...''idiome'', from Late Latin ''idioma'' [[individual]] [[peculiarity]] of [[language]], from [[Greek]] ''idiōmat''-, ''idiōma'', from ''idiousthai'' to approp *1a : the [[language]] peculiar to a people or to a district, [[community]], or class : [[dialec
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] alphabete, from Late [[Latin]] alphabetum, from [[Greek]] alphabētos, fr ...ents]] a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoneme phoneme] in a [[spoken]] [[language]], either as it exists now or as it was in the [[past]]. There are other [[
    4 KB (584 words) - 23:41, 12 December 2020
  • ...mbols]], either in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_language natural language] or in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_languages computer languages ...efers to the way that human beings analyze a sentence or phrase (in spoken language or [[text]]) "in terms of grammatical constituents, identifying the [https:
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  • ...iety as the reputedly most euphonic sound combination of the [[English]] [[language]] (specifically, when spoken with a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_ * Ross Smith, Inside Language - Linguistic and Aesthetic Theory in Tolkien, Walking Tree Publishers (2007
    2 KB (248 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French condempner, from [[Latin]] condemnare, from com- + damn .../en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Indo-European_language Proto-Indo-European] [[language]] [[origin]] is usually said to be a root dap-, which appears in [[Latin]]
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French, from [[Latin]] prosa, from [[feminine]] of prorsus, p *1 a : the ordinary [[language]] people use in [[speaking]] or [[writing]]
    3 KB (443 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...ews, business, legal, medical, and reference publications, and non-English language sources, U.S. Federal and state case law, codes, regulations, legal news, l
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  • ==Language and symbols==
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  • ..."reputation". From blasphemare also came Old French blasmer, from which [[English]] "blame" came. Sometimes the word "blasphemy" is used loosely to mean any profane [[language]], for example: "With much hammering and blasphemy, the locomotive's replac
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  • '''Data''' in everyday language is a [[synonym]] for [[information]] [https://www.dict.org/bin/Dict?Form=Di ==Usage in English==
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  • ...et still connected with the group that instigated this work in a ‘foreign’ language. “We do expect that in reality very little will change. The English human contingent counts some 25 odd people. The Spanish group will also gr
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French, from Medieval [[Latin]] missaticum, from Latin missus * Any [[thought]] or [[idea]] [[expressed]] in a [[language]], prepared in a [[form]] suitable for transmission by any means of communi
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  • ...rian" either described a foreign [[individual]] or [[tribe]] whose first [[language]] was not [[Greek]] or a Greek individual or tribe speaking Greek crudely.
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] ''sugre candy'', part [[translation]] of Middle French ''sucre candi'', fr
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  • ...nd indeed is "the only commonly used English word that is a loan from this language". ISBN 1557865604 ...uage usage, shaman has become interchangeable with the older [[English]] [[language]] pejorative term ''[[witch doctor]]''. This is anthropologically inaccurat
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  • ...information typically found in thesauruses and lexicons. Additionally, the English Wiktionary now includes ''Wikisaurus'', a category that serves as a thesaur
    1 KB (140 words) - 02:42, 13 December 2020
  • Provides a comprehensive guide to English-language articles, book reviews, and feature stories in more than 160 journals devot
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  • ==English== *:[[Rhymes:English:-iːdiəm|Rhymes: -iːdiəm]]
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  • ...language. In some cases, this involves disentangling folk uses of the term language from scientific uses. ...uage''''', follow [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Language '''''this link'''''].</center>
    13 KB (2,044 words) - 22:21, 12 December 2020
  • ...ford English Dictionary]], The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, and Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary define a learning curve as t
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] ''rime'', from Anglo-French ...#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] (Old English rīm [[meaning]] "enumeration, series, numeral") and Old High German rīm,
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Late Latin ethnicus, from [[Greek]] ethnikos national, gentile, from ...rom the 14th century through the middle of the 19th century were used in [[English]] in the meaning of "[[pagan]], heathen", as ethnikos was used as the LXX t
    3 KB (405 words) - 00:54, 13 December 2020
  • ...in the UK or any Commonwealth country where the legal system is founded on English law.
    1 KB (158 words) - 01:39, 13 December 2020
  • ...n many other expressions and names. Its equivalent [[cognate]] in [[Arabic language|Arabic]] is ''[[salaam]]'' and ''sälam'' in [[Ethiopian Semitic languages] ...n]]-[[lamedh|lamed]]-[[mem]] (ש.ל.ם), which has cognates in many [[Semitic language]]s, came to be connected with concepts of ''completeness'', ''fulfilment'',
    5 KB (720 words) - 02:03, 5 September 2009
  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] proverbe, from Anglo-French, from [[Latin]] proverbium, from pro- + verbum ...[[cultures]], and sometimes come down to the present through more than one language. Both the [[Bible]] ([[Book of Proverbs|Book of Proverbs]]) and medieval La
    1 KB (205 words) - 02:35, 13 December 2020
  • ...lary]] for everyday [[Archaeology|archaeological]] work in the [[English]] language, this up-to-date dictionary is the most wide-ranging and comprehensive of i
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  • ...skrit, Pali, Prakrit and Tamil which have already been given the classical-language status.'' and one of the liturgical languages of Hinduism and [[Buddha|Budd ...age]], and one of the earliest attested members of the [[Indo-European]] [[language]] family.
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  • *2a : a sum or stock of words employed by a [[language]], [[group]], [[individual]], or [[work]] or in a field of [[knowledge]] ...]'s '''vocabulary''' is the set of [[words]] they are familiar with in a [[language]]. A vocabulary usually [[grows]] and evolves with age, and serves as a use
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  • ...ly directed to one or more [[deity|deities]]. It is the informal term in [[English]] for what [[Sociology|sociologists]] call a ''[[cult|cultus]]'', the [[bod In its older sense in the [[English]] language of ''worthiness'' or ''respect'' (Anglo-Saxon ''weorðscipe''), ''worship''
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  • ...as a synonym for Israelites, and sometimes for the users of the [[Hebrew]] language ([[Jews]] and [[Israel]]is). From Middle English ''Ebreu'' Old French ''Ebreu'' Latin ''Hebraeus'' or ''Hebraic'', Ancient G
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  • ...es." "''Plagiary''", a derivative of "''plagiarus''" was introduced into [[English]] in 1601 by dramatist [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Jonson Ben Jonson The derived form ''plagiarism'' was introduced into English around 1620. The Latin ''plagiārius'', "kidnapper", and ''plagium'', "kidn
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  • A '''word''' is a unit of [[language]] that represents a [[concepts|concept]] which can be expressively [[commun ...m and zero or more affixes. Words can be combined to create other units of language such as phrases, clauses, and sentences. A word consisting of two or more s
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  • ...C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] ''trēowth'' [[fidelity]]; akin to Old English ''trēowe'' faithful ...th continue to be debated among scholars, philosophers, and theologians. [[Language]] and words are a means by which humans convey [[information]] to one anoth
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  • ...ic صفر, ṣafira = "it was empty", ṣifr = "zero", "nothing". The first known English use was in 1598. ...d "to keep the rows". This circle was called صفر (ṣifr, "empty") in Arabic language. That was the earliest mention of the name ''ṣifr'' that eventually becam
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  • ...Second World War, for example ''Zweiter Weltkrieg'' in German. Non-English-language use typically translates to Second World War, for instance the Spanish ''Se
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  • The [[Buddhist]] term translated into [[English]] as "mindfulness" originates in the Pali term sati and its Sanskrit counte ...s_Davids Thomas William Rhys Davids] (1881) first [[translated]] sati as [[English]] mindfulness in sammā-sati "Right Mindfulness; the active, watchful [[min
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  • ...fall in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_American_English American] [[English]]) is one of the four [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperate temperate] [ ...ly those who could [[read]] and [[write]], the only people whose use of [[language]] we now know), the word harvest lost its [[reference]] to the time of year
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] projecte, from Medieval [[Latin]] projectum, from Latin, neuter of project When the [[English]] [[language]] initially adopted the [[word]], it referred to a plan of something, not t
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French sermun, from Medieval Latin sermon-, sermo, from [[Lati .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] [[word]] which was derived from an Old French term, which in turn came fro
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] hwisperian; akin to Old High German hwispalōn to whisper, Old Norse hvīs ...he IPA for whispered phonation, since it is not used phonemically in any [[language]]. However, a sub-dot under phonemically voiced segments is sometimes seen
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] ''dēaf''; akin to [[Greek]] ''typhlos'' [[blind]], ''typhein'' to smoke, ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] ''dēaf'', of Germanic origin; related to Dutch ''doof'' and German ''taub
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  • ...in the story are in this category: the monarch, the robe, the scepter, the language, the subjects. ...[[Middle English]], from [[Old French]], from [[Latin]], from the [[Greek language|Greek]] σύμβολον (''sýmbolon'') from the root words συν- (''syn
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French, from Late Latin forestis (silva) unenclosed (woodland) ...e generally. By the start of the fourteenth century the word appeared in [[English]] [[texts]], indicating all three [[senses]]: the most common one, the lega
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  • ...flesh; probably akin to Avestan thwarəs- to cut. It is first recorded in [[English]] in 1579, in an annotation to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Shepheard ...al wit depending for its effect on bitter, caustic, and often [[ironic]] [[language]] that is usually directed against an [[individual]]
    3 KB (455 words) - 02:03, 13 December 2020
  • ...glish, Spanish or Mandarin but where it concerns coming to an [[eventual]] language for all or for most — here we go again, ‘tipping point’ — both the
    3 KB (499 words) - 16:46, 7 March 2019
  • ...tantum term borrowed from Latin, which has been used in the [[English]] [[language]] since the 1890s. The [[English]] [[word]] [[morality]] comes from the same [[root]], as does the noun mora
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  • [[Latin]] ''numerus'' + English -''o- + -logy'' ...story of numerological [[ideas]], the word "numerology" is not recorded in English before c.1907.
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from [[Latin]] vulgaris of the mob, vulgar, from volgus, vulgus mob, comm *5 a : offensive in [[language]] : [[earth]]y
    3 KB (398 words) - 02:42, 13 December 2020
  • Quiescence (kwē-ĕs-ənts) is a [[Latin]]-derived [[English]] language noun referring to a [[state]] of [[being]] quiet, still, at rest, dormant,
    2 KB (233 words) - 02:34, 13 December 2020
  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] prȳde, from prūd proud ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] ''prut'', probably from Old French ''prud'' "[[brave]], valiant" (11th cen
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  • ...''slengenamn'', which means "nickname"), but is discounted by the [[Oxford English Dictionary]] based on "date and early associations". *1 : [[language]] peculiar to a particular [[group]]: as a : argot
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  • ...[[signifies]] a cup as an object, but cup as a term of the [[language]] [[English]] is being used to supposit for the wine contained in the cup. ...e cup the term cup is standing in for the object that is called a cup in [[English]], so it is in personal supposition. A term is in improper supposition, if
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  • ...years of art journalism at a keystroke. Users can research leading English-language sources, plus others published in French, Italian, German, Spanish, and Dut
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] rēon to lament, [[Sanskrit]] rauti he roars # Pendleton, S.c. (1998), 'Rumor research revisited and expanded', Language& Communication, vol. 1. no. 18, pp. 69--86.
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  • ...nse (future). The use of this suffix is an inflection. In contrast, in the English clause "I will lead", the word "lead" is not inflected for any of person, n ...] (a unit of meaning which cannot stand alone as a word). For example, the English word "cars" is a noun that is inflected for number, specifically to express
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] citie large or small town, from Anglo-French cité, from Medieval [[Latin] ...] on how a city is distinguished from a town within general [[English]] [[language]] [[meanings]], many cities have a particular [[administrative]], [[legal]]
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] plōh hide of [[land]]; akin to Old High German pfluog plow ...icultural implement at 3a, sulh, [[survived]] in western and south-western English [[dialects]] (those spoken in the areas least [[influenced]] by Norse settl
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  • ...in symbols. On other accounts, mastery of symbolic thought (in particular, language) is a prerequisite for conceptual thought. ...erro'' in Spanish. The fact that concepts are in some sense independent of language makes [[translation]] possible - words in various languages have identical
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  • ...cultural development of that population or to that population itself. In [[English]] when capitalized and without modifiers (that is simply, the Diaspora), th ...t Churches on the continent". The term became more widely assimilated into English by the mid 1950s, with long-term expatriates in significant numbers from ot
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  • ...s [[unknown]], but it may have come from the German bei and gott, or the [[English]] by God. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Camden William Camden] wro ...but it is unclear whether or not this is how it entered the [[English]] [[language]].
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  • Middle [[English]]. a. Old French. id(e)le, and idole, ad. late L. dl-um (also dl-um in Prud
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  • ...he original message that follows was in French and has been translated for English audiences] ...we think we will attempt to try with T/ R’s who speak languages other than English.
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from [[Latin]] complementum, from complēre to fill up, complete, from co ...ant digit farthest to the left is discarded —used especially in assembly [[language]] programming
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  • Since entering the English language, Since then, stupidity has taken place along with "[[fool]]," "[[idiot]],"
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  • ...[[Greek]] [[language]] the term can apply to men or women; but in modern [[English]] it is in use only for men, while nun is used for female monastics. Although the term monachos (“monk”) is of Christian origin, in the English language it tends to be used analogously or loosely also for ascetics from other rel
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  • ...-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] ''lyge''; akin to Old High German ''lugī'', Old English ''lēogan'' to lie ..."), usually with the corresponding [[tone]] of [[voice]] and emphatic body language of one confidently speaking the [[truth]]. Bold-faced lie can also refer to
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] ''félan'' (also ''gefélan'') [[corresponds]] to Old Frisian ''fêla'', O The [[word]] was first used in the [[English]] [[language]] to describe the [[physical]] sensation of [[touch]] through either [[expe
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  • ...ommunicate]] their solutions with the computer in some particular computer language. * The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 3rd edition, Houghton Mifflin (1992), hardcover, 2140 pages, ISBN 0-395-44
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] windan to wind, twist ...t, hand-held stick of wood, stone, ivory, or metal. Generally, in modern [[language]], wands are [[ceremonial]] and/or have [[associations]] with [[magic]] but
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  • Tone is the use of pitch in language to distinguish lexical or grammatical meaning—that is, to distinguish or ...tone. Furthermore, tone tends to play almost no grammatical role (the Jin language of Shanxi being a notable exception). In many tonal African languages, such
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  • ...[[truth]] revealers have been authorized to translate into the [[English]] language of Urantia.
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] rivere, from Anglo-French, from Vulgar Latin *riparia, from [[Latin]], fem ...n a creek, but this is not always the case, because of vagueness in the [[language]].
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  • The use of taboo in [[English]] dates back to 1777 when English explorer, [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_James_Cook Captain James C ...rm comes from the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tongan_language Tongan] [[language]], and appears in many [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polynesian_culture Po
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  • ...djective castus [[meaning]] "[[pure]]". The words entered the [[English]] language around the middle of the 13th century; at that time they meant slightly [[d
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Middle French & [[Latin]]; Middle French fugitif, from Latin fugitiv ...ncken]'s [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_American_Language The American Language] and The Thesaurus of American Slang [[proclaim]] that lam, lamister, and "
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  • :b. b. The [[transcription]] of a dictated passage, esp. one in a foreign language, as a [[school]] exercise; a passage [[transcribed]] in this way. ..., the dictations are the subject of structured championships, similar to [[English]] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spelling_bee spelling bees].
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  • ...view of [[polytheism]] and many of its [[concept]]s. In short, "mantra" in English carries a negative connotation of 'mindless or thoughtless repetition of a ...f the concepts that each character represented. The Chinese prized written language much more highly than did the Indian Buddhist missionaries, and the writing
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  • ...ce]] regardless of their [[sex]] or age. This is the old usage of "Man" in English. It derives from Proto-Indo-European *mánu- 'man, human', cognate to [[San ...a man" and "a woman" respectively, and "Man" was gender-neutral. In Middle English man displaced wer as term for "male human", whilst wifman (which eventually
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] tīene, from tīen, adjective, ten; akin to Old High German zehan ten, [[ ...on [[system]] of denoting [[numbers]] in both [[spoken]] and [[written]] [[language]]. Ten is the first two-digit [[number]] in [[decimal]] and thus the lowest
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  • [[Image:English.jpg|right|frame]] ...he most profound outside influences on the development of PDE (present day english) are the [[Viking]] conquests and settlements--resulting in the establishme
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  • #: Ref: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the [[English|English Language]], Fourth Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004. 08 Mar. 2007.
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  • ...he 1920s, especially in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglosphere English-language countries], By 1897, it was said to have more than eight million followers
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] diffinicioun, from Anglo-French, from [[Latin]] definition-, definitio, fr ...n etymology showing snapshots of the earlier meanings and the [[parent]] [[language]].
    6 KB (978 words) - 23:42, 12 December 2020
  • ...ns have a highly developed [[brain]], capable of abstract [[reasoning]], [[language]], [[inner life|introspection]], and problem solving. This mental capabilit ...ki/index.php?title=English#1500-present.09THE_MODERN_ENGLISH_PERIOD Modern English].[7] The word is from Proto-Germanic *mannaz, from a Proto-[https://en.wiki
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  • ...e accomplished through exploiting technicalities, loopholes, and ambiguous language. Following the letter of the law but not the spirit is also a tactic used a ...has entered the language as a pejorative for one who does so; the [[Oxford English Dictionary]] defines ''Pharisee'' with one of the meanings as ''A person of
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  • ...that involve the [[flow]] of liquids through tubes. But in the [[English]] language today, the [[word]] siphon usually refers to a tube in an inverted U shape
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  • ...oups who spoke the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahuatl_language Nahuatl language] and who achieved political and military dominance over large parts of Meso ...he Mexica, Acolhua and Tepanecs, and who like them, also spoke the Nahuatl language. In this meaning it is possible to talk about an '''Aztec civilization''' i
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  • ...be liquid + -or -or1 ); r. [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle Englsih] lic ( o ) ur < ...ford English Dictionary]], an early use of the [[word]] in the [[English]] language, meaning simply "a liquid," can be dated to 1225. The first use that the OE
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  • ...longer widely known—it is in "The 1,000 Most Obscure Words in the English Language," defined as "the area of one's active mentality that has to do with [[desi ...iving," and by the ''Living Webster Encyclopedia Dictionary of the English Language'' (1980) as "one of the three [[modes]], together with [[cognition]] and [[
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  • ...that her "Martian" language had a strong resemblance to Ms. Smith's native language of French. Flournoy concluded that her automatic writing was "[[romance]]s The [[Oxford English Dictionary]] implies that '''Automatic Writing''' is that writing done by a
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  • ...o the Oxford English Dictionary, the first recorded use of "malapropos" in English is from 1630, and the first person known to have used the word "malaprop" i ...e [[process]] is by which the [[brain]] [[translates]] [[thoughts]] into [[language]].
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  • ...lassical Studies''' is the branch of the [[Humanities]] dealing with the [[language]]s, [[literature]], [[history]], [[art]], and other aspects of the ancient ...'[[Literae Humaniores]]'', comprising the study of Ancient Greek and Latin language and literature, Greek and Roman art and archaeology, history and philosophy
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  • ...ed with "to"). The opposites of verbosity are [[plain]] language (or plain English) and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laconism laconism].
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French, from Late Latin subversion-, subversio, from [[Latin]] ....org/wiki/14th_century 14th century], it was being used in the [[English]] language with [[reference]] to [[laws]], and in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1
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  • ...y a high degree of similarity in [[content]], [[narrative]] arrangement, [[language]], and sentence and paragraph [[structure]]s. These gospels are also consi # "synoptic". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. 2nd ed. 1989.
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  • ...and &#x03bc;&#x03b9;&#x03ba;&#x03c1;&#x03bf;- "Micro-", which are [[Greek language|Greek]] respectively for "large" and "small", and the word [[Cosmos|&#x03ba The English physician and alchemist [[Robert Fludd]] (1574-1637) expicitly based his wo
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  • ...n the dictionary. The first thing you realize is that the wondrous English language, once again, has applied several meanings to one word, which in other langu ...of meanings to just one word. English has been described as the shorthand language, but it also can be quite confusing.
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  • ...erstanding each other, and, incidentally, our improving use of the English language is an important part of why we can be at ease with each other. Our countles ...cause they do not live in your town, your country. They might well speak a language you do not understand. They might well have an education unlike yours – c
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  • ...e French language during the 1800s. The word did not enter the [[English]] language as the familiar conjunction until 1857 or as a French import in [https://en
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  • ...nd modern '':fr:écriture''. The oldest English usage cited in the [[Oxford English Dictionary]] (OED) is from ''Cursor Mund]'' (''c''. 1300): "For-þi es godd The word was coined in 1250-1300, during the Middle English period, from the [[Latin]] word, ''scriptura'', meaning "writing." [https:/
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French, from [[Latin]] ''sententia'' [[feeling]], [[opinion]], ...hat must [explicitly] include a subject and a verb. For example, in second-language acquisition, teachers often reject one-word answers that only imply a claus
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French, from [[Latin]] conscientia, from conscient-, consciens ...determined, with its subject matter probably learned, or imprinted (like [[language]]) as part of a [[culture]].[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conscience]
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  • Being defined so broadly, there is no [[universal]] [[language]] or unifying institution for designers of all [[disciplines]]. This allows # See dictionary meanings in the Cambridge Dictionary of American English, at Dictionary.com (esp. meanings 1-5 and 7-8) and at AskOxford (esp. verbs
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  • ...stions for proper action in life, parables frequently use [[metaphor]]ical language which allows people to more easily discuss difficult or complex ideas. In [ ...Fables'', George Fyler Townsend defined "parable" as "the designed use of language purposely intended to convey a hidden and secret meaning other than that co
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] ''scrowle'', blend of ''rolle'' roll and ''scrowe'' scrap, scroll (from An ...ritten in lines from the top to the bottom of the page. Depending on the [[language]], the letters may be written left to right, right to left, or alternating
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  • ...transmitted from there, and is being immediately translated to the English language by your Thought Adjuster."
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  • Language:English
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  • ...k: σημειωτικός, semeiotikos, an interpreter of signs), was first used in [[English]] by Henry Stubbes (1670, p. 75) in a very precise sense to denote the bran ...their language. But that word can transmit that meaning only within the [[language]]'s grammatical [[structure]]s and [[code]]s (see syntax and semantics). Co
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English], from Late Latin samaritanus, noun & adjective, from [[Greek]] samaritēs With the revival of [[Hebrew]] as a spoken language by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aliyah Jewish immigrants] to [[Israel]],
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  • The [[English]] [[language]] word "polytheism" is attested from the 17th century, loaned from French p
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  • ...absence of the modifier ''not'', which negates the statement. Many other [[language]]s contain similar modifiers: Italian and Interlingua have ''non'', Spanish
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  • ...araguay and in the Philippines; the British Empire established itself with English in northern North America; elsewhere, despite Russian not supplanting the i # The Oxford English Reference Dictionary, Second Edition (2001), p.461, ISBN 0-19-860046-1
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  • .... His early career was marked by poetry that bore immense [[knowledge]] of English [[society]] and he met that knowledge with sharp criticism. Another importa ...org/wiki/Lives_of_the_Most_Eminent_English_Poets Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets]''), Johnson refers to the beginning of the seventeenth century in wh
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], via [[Latin]] from Greek ''papuros'' — see also [[paper]]
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] ''narkotik'', from Middle French ''narcotique'', from ''narcotique'', adje ...ic principle to opium and tobacco imparts similar properties. In popular [[language]], alcohol is classed among the stimulants; and opium and tobacco among the
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  • The [[Oxford English Dictionary]] and most scholars state that sincerity from sincere is derived ...Dan Brown's Digital Fortress, though Brown attributes it to the Spanish [[language]], not [[Latin]].
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  • ...ore [[esoteric]] concepts in your [[language]], and our understanding of [[English]] is not always as deep as it could be. Hence, we sometimes use words which ...ately clarify the picture, but that would not help you. We are left with a language which is sometimes inadequate. My own [[interpretation]] of the words faith
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  • ...m of art in [[theater]] dating from the 17th century in [[English language|English]] [[drama]]. ...am Davenant]], who would become one of the major [[impressario]]s of the [[English Restoration]], also wrote pre-Revolutionary masques with Inigo Jones. The
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  • Not all [[theories]] of meaning have a concept of "literal language". Under theories that do not, figure of speech is not an entirely coherent * [https://www.ego4u.com/en/cram-up/writing/style Stylistic Devices on English Grammar Online] from Lingo4you GbR
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  • ...ive senses in German are apparently much later [[developments]] than the [[English]] [[word]]. Since its [[emergence]] in the [[English]] language in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16th_Century 16th century] (related t
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] Brut in the early 13th century, saying that the quarrel between Arthur's v
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  • ...velation; a vain confidence of divine favour or communication." In current English vernacular the word simply means intense enjoyment, interest, or approval. ...m" was seen in the time around 1700 as the cause of the previous century's English Civil War and its attendant atrocities, and thus it was an absolute social
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  • ...ly "acquaintance with letters" as in the first sense given in the [[Oxford English Dictionary]] (from the [[Latin]] ''littera'' meaning "an individual written ...n only [[text]] composed of letters, or other examples of symbolic written language ([[Egyptian hieroglyphs]], for example). An even more narrow interpretation
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  • ...al calculus], theorems are often expressed in a natural language such as [[English]]. The same is true of [[proofs]], which are often expressed as logically o
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  • In [[modern]] [[English]] [[language]], the term rogue is used pejoratively to [[describe]] a dishonest or unpri
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  • ...ative exchanges. Worldview remains a [[confused]] and confusing concept in English, used very differently by linguists and [[sociologists]]. It is for this re ...Edward Sapir] gives a very subtle account of this relationship in English. English linguists tend to persist in attaching [[discussion]] of worldviews to the
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  • *Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language, Second Edition, Unabridged, W.A. Neilson, T.A. *Knott, P.W. Carhart (eds.)
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  • ...els,"—pancharatnani—of [[Devanagiri]] [[literature]]. In plain but noble [[language]] it unfolds a [[philosophical]] [[system]] which remains to this day the p ...n grateful recognition of the help derived from their labours, and because English literature would certainly be incomplete without possessing in popular form
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  • ...[[proportion]] to its merits the least read body of poetry in the English language". His visual artistry led one contemporary art critic to proclaim him "far
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] ''flavour'', [[modification]] of Anglo-French ''flaur'', ''flour'', from V Although the terms "flavoring" or "flavorant" in common language denote the combined [[chemical]] sensations of taste and smell, the same te
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  • The word "'''charity'''" entered the [[English]] [[language]] through the Old French word "charité" which was derived from the [[Latin ..._Letter_of_Paul_to_the_Corinthians Letter to the Corinthians]. However the English [[word]] more generally used for this [[concept]], both before and since (a
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  • ...ody language]] in addition to words when they speak. The use of gesture as language by some ethnic [[groups]] is more common than in others, and the amount of ...f gesture, [[integration]] of gesture and [[speech]], and the evolution of language. Other prominent researchers in this field include Susan Goldin-Meadow and
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Late Latin delusion-, delusio, from deludere A '''delusion''', in everyday [[language]], is a fixed [[belief]] that is either [[false]], fanciful, or derived fro
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  • ...organisation ([[Cosmos]]) of the [[nature]]. The word has been in use in [[English]] since at least the late 16th century.[2] .... Theories may be expressed mathematically, [[symbol]]ically, or in common language, but are generally expected to follow principles of [[rational]] [[thought]
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  • The term "Enlightenment" came into use in [[English]] during the mid-nineteenth century,[2] with particular reference to French ...[[concepts]] of [[divinity]] and [[eternity]] into the [[symbols]] of the language of the [[finite]] concepts of the [[mortal]] [[mind]]. But we know that the
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  • ...ting ''[[Psyche (psychology)|psykhē]]''. The word was loaned into [[Middle English]] via [[Old French]] ''espirit'' in the 13th century. In India [[Prana]] me ...nstincts. Similarly, both the [[Scandinavian languages]] and the [[Chinese language]] uses the term "breath" to refer to the spirit.
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  • ===='''''[[Language]]''''', '''''[[Light and Life]]'''''==== ...ted]] into English before the lesson? And more about the [[UB|U-Book]] and language.
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  • ...neffable ''Mysterium Magnum'' of the "Great Continuum" that is rendered in English as "Mindstream": the nondual resolution of ''ātman'' and ''anātman''. ...nt in the iconographic representation of the ''Five Jinas''(''The Twilight Language: Explorations in Buddhist Meditation and Symbolism''. Curzon Press: London.
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  • ...o me, but enough to get me interested in joining her in changing it into [[English]]. After we finished that project I started this web page for those persons
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  • “In language, an alphabet represents the mechanism of materialism, while the words expre “The English alphabet consists of 26 letters that can be strung into meaningful words or
    3 KB (401 words) - 14:10, 6 April 2020
  • ...on discussions at the Muenster Rencontre in 2006, a collection of English language translations of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akkad Akkadian texts], which
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  • According to the ''American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language'', the Indo-European root is '''''ser''' ''[[meaning]] "to protect". Accord
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  • ..."N-VP" (noun - verb phrase) pattern, but some knowledge of the [[English]] language is required to detect the pattern. Computer science, ethology, and psycholo ::[[Alfred North Whitehead]] (1861-1947), English philosopher and mathematician. ''Dialogues'', June 10, 1943.
    6 KB (957 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • *Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language, Second Edition, Unabridged, W.A. Neilson, T.A. Knott, P.W. Carhart (eds.),
    3 KB (476 words) - 01:28, 13 December 2020
  • ...(one language) also is promising since the best candidate for that, the [[English]] tongue, is not linked to just one [[nation]] as happened to global langua
    5 KB (777 words) - 17:11, 14 February 2019
  • ...]] life is produced by an immaterial [[soul]]". The [[actual]] [[English]] language form of animism however can only be attested to 1819. The term was taken an
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  • ...republic. Dictionary.com. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004. https://dictionary.referen
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  • ===The word ''gender'' in English=== The word ''gender'' comes from the [[Middle English]] ''gendre'', a loanword from Norman-conquest-era Old French. This, in turn
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  • ...e, Bengali, Gujarati, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu have the most first-language speakers). Hindi name Bharat.
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  • ...u will acknowledge to all lists that with some degree of ease a Portuguese language list can be commenced with. ...to translate into Portuguese the messages that at this point go out on our English, French and Spanish lists, and these volunteers will contact you to make th
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  • ...lar language. Alana will speak through any language available, should that language pattern be brought to her in the yearning of the mind of one who yearns to ...would observe us, be with us for a long time, and in the process learn our language. It is so much more that you can use the patterns that are already in the s
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  • ...r intellectually challenged is now preferred by most [[advocates]] in most English-speaking countries. Clinically, however, mental retardation is a subtype of *Delays in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speech_communication oral language development]
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  • ...ion to Aristotelian [[philosophy]], it also has its own [[tradition]] in [[English]] which now causes some [[confusion]]. Noah Webster's 1828 Dictionary of the American Language defines Magnanimity as such:
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Medieval Latin aequator, [[literally]], equalizer, from [[Latin]] ae In simpler [[language]], the Equator is an [[imaginary]] line on the [[Earth]]'s surface [[Equal|
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  • ...odern word "Gospel" comes from the [[Old English]] word "Godspell." In Old English, "god" with a long "o" meant "[[good]]," and "spell" meant "word" (we carry # [https://www.truevictories.com/2007/10/downloads.html Bible as a Second Language], webpage, retrieved November 05, 2008
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  • ...used to describe any of the European peoples who spoke, or speak, a Celtic language. (Celtic Culture : A Historical Encyclopedia ISBN 978-1851094400) The term The earliest direct attestation of a Celtic language are the [[Lepontic]] inscriptions, beginning from the 6th century BC. Conti
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  • ...ollowed by the following message sung in English. Some of the unrecognized language was interspersed in small phrases, as indicated by the asterisk *] ...owl’s tone was sustained during the following message, which was spoken in English.]
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  • ...isdoms]] which unite the trikāya. These tantric correlations (or "twilight language") are evident in the iconographic representation of the five Jīnas[11] and ...] [[theory]], the "stream of consciousness" metaphor became more common in English usage, and was adapted into different [[contexts]], for instance, the strea
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  • ...the sense of narrāre ‘tell’; the variant spellings passed to aconter and [[English]] account, accompt, though here with no corresponding division of meaning. Today, accounting is called "the [[language]] of [[business]]" because it is the vehicle for reporting [[financial]] [[
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  • 6 KB (840 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...sh language|English]] - the English term is litterateur (from the [[French language|French]] ''littérateur''). The Republic of Letters grew during the late 17 ===Nineteenth-century English usage===
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  • ...and marked especially in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_literature English literature] by sensibility and the use of [[autobiographical]] material, an ...epistemology]] of human activities as conditioned by nature in the form of language and customary usage. Romanticism reached beyond the [[rational]] and [https
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  • ...entities]]. The [[Etymology|etymological]] origins of the word (in [[Greek language|Greek]] διά (diá,through) + λόγος (logos,word,speech) concepts lik ...]’s ''Imaginary Conversations'' ([[1821]]-[[1828]]) formed the most famous English example of dialogue in the [[19th century]], although the dialogues of [[Ar
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  • ...Hebrew acronym unlikely to be appreciated by readers unfamiliar with that language. It also refers to the particular arrangement of the biblical books as foun ''Hebrew'' in the term ''Hebrew Bible'' refers to the original [[language]] of the books, but it may also be taken as referring to the Jews of the [[
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  • The '''Revised Standard Version''' (RSV) is an [[English language|English]] [[Bible translation|translation]] of the [[Bible]] published in the mid-2 ...the English-speaking church, but also to "preserve all that is best in the English Bible as it has been known and used through the centuries" and "to put the
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  • ...ning either various taverns and eating houses, "loose talk" or [[gypsy]] [[language]], or a room with "low going-ons". In ''Life in London'' [https://en.wikipe
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  • ...r later editions of the same [[work]] or for [[translations]] into another language. For these, new imprimaturs are required. English laws of 1586, 1637 and 1662 required an official [[license]] for printing [
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  • Oliver: Now I hear you say that your [[name]] might be from a celestial [[language]] and/or have high spiritual [[meaning]]. If this is so, why would you not ...e German 'von something or another' or 'van who knows what' may be used. [[English]] commonly links 'son' to the name to denote [[parentage]] most commonly Jo
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] hǣlend and the modern German and Dutch Heiland), is, with the [[fragments ...three fragments: (I) The passage which appears as lines 235-851 of the Old English verse Genesis in the Caedmon Manuscript (MS Junius 11) (this fragment is kn
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  • ...gh both [[words]] have roughly the same [[origin]]al [[meaning]]. In the [[English]]-speaking world the term pedagogy refers to the [[science]] or theory of e ....dukejournals.org/ ''Pedagogy: Critical Approaches to Teaching Literature, Language, Composition, Culture'']
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  • ...English origin (compare the original French coopération). See the list of English words with diacritics for other examples
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  • Dr [[Samuel Johnson]], in his A ''Dictionary of the English Language'' (1755), defined honour as having several [[senses]], the first of which w
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  • ...he mathematical quaternion partakes of both these elements; in technical [[language]] it may be said to be 'time plus space', or 'space plus time': and in this ...viewpoint of spacetime being important in general relativity too. (For an English translation of Minkowski's article, see Lorentz et al. 1952.) The 1926 thir
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  • ...dard romanization "Merdinus" to avoid a resemblance to the vulgar [[French language|French]] word ''merde'', meaning "shit." ...eoples of [[Great Britain]] who will join together and drive the [[England|English]] – and later the [[Normans]] – back into the sea. Some of these works
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  • ...ns of the Tarot de Marseille, those suits are identified by their [[French language|French]] names of ''Bâtons'' (Rods, Staves, Sceptres, or Wands), ''Épées ...de Figures'' (The Minor Figure Cards) in French, and the "Royal Arcana" in English.
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  • ...''siv''-, meaning to sew. These words, including [[Latin]] ''suere'' and [[English]] to sew, all ultimately deriving from PIE *siH-/syuH- 'to sew'), as does t ...name of sūya (in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ardhamagadhi Ardhamagadhi] language) can derive from [[Sanskrit]] sūkta, but hardly from sūtra.
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  • ...''" or "'''skilled'''". (Ultimately derived from the [[Proto-Indo-European language|Proto-Indo-European]] root ''gnō-'', "to know".[https://www.bartleby.com/6 As with many words in the [[English]] [[language]], ''narration'' has more than one [[meaning]]. In its broadest context, n
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  • ===Topic: ''English As World Language''=== ...when the book talks about a common tongue, and I [[imagine]] it would be [[English]]. With that in mind, should we be...
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  • ...kespeare]] as "The Bard", recognizing him as a [[paragon]] writer of the [[language]]. Finally, claims to preference or [[authority]] can be refuted: the Briti ...atin nomen, and Greek ὄνομα (onoma), possibly from the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE): *nomn-.[2]
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] enmite, from Anglo-French enemité, enemisté, from enemi enemy ...lity, [[religion]], sexual orientation, [[gender]] identity, disability, [[language]] ability, [[ideology]], [[social]] class, occupation, appearance (height,
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  • ...]]. As the Chinese pronounce various words--the different pitches in their language means different things. Branson means ‘[[heroic]] [[attitude]].' That is TECTRA: Abraham, staying in the same vein, all these normal [[English]] [[names]]--I come along with a name of "Tectra." Is that some kind of int
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  • *Translated into English by Michel Ardoullie. ...ording for transcription. The original recording is in French, her native language, and was translated a few hours later by her husband, Michel. I leave in al
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  • ...eek language|Greek]]: ''μεταφορά'' - ''metaphora'', meaning "transfer") is language that directly compares seemingly unrelated subjects. In the simplest case, ...anding (itself a metaphor), but in none of these cases do most speakers of English actually visualize the physical action. Dead metaphors, by definition, nor
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  • ...rACAAAAIAAJ The Century dictionary; an encyclopedic lexicon of the English language]. New York: The Century Co. Page [https://books.google.com/books?id=wrACAAA ...y]]. In German, French, and indeed, most languages of the world other than English, this distinction was never made, and the same word is used to mean both "h
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  • JAREL: The spelling of my [[name]] in your [[English]] language can be either Jarel or JarEl. Is that O K ?
    5 KB (765 words) - 22:59, 12 December 2020
  • ...ding over, passing on", and is used in a number of ways in the [[English]] language: * Klein, Ernest, Dr., A comprehensive etymological dictionary of the English language: Dealing with the origin of words and their sense development thus illustra
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  • ...that "literature" cannot be defined or that it can refer to any use of [[language]]. Specific theories are distinguished not only by their methods and conclu ...erogeneous tradition of [[Continental philosophy]] and the [[philosophy of language]], any classification of their approaches is only an approximation. There a
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  • .../en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States United States of America] or to the [[English]] speaking worlds, but it takes a strong [[commitment]] to this type of thi ...countries] where they don't speak English, so I had to teach the . ....’s English so they could read [[the Book]]!" and I think that after that he decided th
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  • ...ion with Middle Eastern and North African Arab traders. In the [[English]] language the term risk appeared only in the 17th century, and "seems to be imported
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  • ...od's barn]. What interesting [[figures of speech]] are in your [[English]] language! You know [[communication]] is a two pronged effort. I send out to you what
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  • ...it points to, but can never completely capture, the fundamental role that language plays in constituting the historical, social, cultural, and personal networ From the sixteenth century, the word ‘discourse’ referred in English to spatial movement, to the act or faculty of conversation, to the movement
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  • ...?title=English#ca._600-1100.09THE_OLD_ENGLISH.2C_OR_ANGLO-SAXON_PERIOD Old English] ōther; akin to Old High German andar other, [[Sanskrit]] antara ...with the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Symbolic symbolic order] and [[language]]. Levinas connected it with the scriptural and [[traditional]] [[God]], in
    15 KB (2,211 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • ...fically on the use of language by humans see the main article on [[natural language]]. == Properties of language ==
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  • ...qismet" meaning either "the will\save Allah" or "portion, lot or fate". In English, the word is synonymous with "Fate" or "Destiny".
    7 KB (1,190 words) - 23:43, 12 December 2020
  • ...n in their efforts to understand speech (in [[context]] of the reference [[English]]) than fathers.[13] ...in nearly every language on earth, countering the natural localization of language.
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  • ...In [[Islam]], it is the standard ending to [[Dua]] (supplication). Common English translations of the word ''amen'' include: "Verily", "Truly", "So be it", a ...ary etymology, ''amen'' passed from Greek into Late Latin, and thence into English.[https://www.bartleby.com/61/75/A0247500.html]
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  • ...he analogue or source) to another particular subject (the target), and a [[language|linguistic]] expression corresponding to such a process. In a narrower sens ...er of a message including them. Analogy is important not only in ordinary language]] and common sense, where proverbs and [[idiom]]s give many examples of its
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  • ...e the disintegration of the political and social institutions, of culture, language, national feelings, religion, and the economic existence of national groups # Oxford English Dictionary, second edition draft entry 2004. "genocide".
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  • ...it is bound within the pages and restrictions of the book, and the English language, or other languages into which it has been [[translated]]. This [[Teaching
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  • The English-language [[King James Version]] of 1611 followed the lead of the Luther Bible in usi All English translations of the Bible printed in the sixteenth century included a secti
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  • ...niuses for those born to be kings of men and "idiots and imbeciles", two [[English]] pejoratives, for those at the other extreme of the "normal scheme."[8] Da # "genius". Oxford English Dictionary (2 ed.). Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. 1989.
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  • ...held that the [[original]] name was IaHUe(H), i.e. Jahve(h, or with the [[English]] values of the letters, Yahwe(h, and one or other of these forms is now ge ...of_genesis#Chapter_.49 Genesis. 49:25]). Israelite religion, like Israel's language and culture, is a child of the Canaanite or West Semitic world.
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  • ...t least 100–200 years into the A.D., at which time considerations of Greek language and beginnings of Christian acceptance of the Septuagint weighed against so .... That is not common yet in 2013, so they are not as widely available in [[English]].
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  • ...zedek]]. We indited these [[narratives]] and put them in the [[English]] [[language]], by a [[technique]] authorized by our superiors, in the year [https://en.
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] forme, from Anglo-French furme, forme, from [[Latin]] forma form, [[beauty ...res]] or styles, which may be determined by factors such as [[harmonic]] [[language]], typical [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhythm rhythms], [[types]] of mus
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  • ...pt recording a word's most known uses and variants in ''all'' varieties of English, worldwide, past, and present; per the 1933 Preface: ...e-history, pronunciation, and etymology. It embraces not only the standard language of literature and conversation, whether current at the moment, or obsolete,
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  • ...resuppositions, preunderstandings, the [[meaning]] and [[philosophy]] of [[language]], and [[semiotics]].[1] ...works in the Western [[tradition]] to deal with the relationship between [[language]] and [[logic]] in a comprehensive, explicit, and [[formal]] way. It is oft
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  • ...s been suggested for a handful of known Philistine words (See [[Philistine language]]). The etymology of the word into English is from Old French ''Philistin'', from Late Latin ''Philistinus'', from Lat
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  • ...can not get a ride to the [[meeting]]. This woman also is just learning [[English]].) Yes, little one. We hear your [[gratitude]] and that so delights our [[ ...l to know because my image is that the teaching mission is centered in the English speaking world."
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  • ...ns of [[force]], [[energy]], and [[power]]. There is such [[paucity]] of [[language]] that we must use these terms in multiple [[meanings]]. In this paper, for
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  • ...tudy of important works of the literature in that language, as well as the language itself (grammar, vocabulary, etc.). ...wealth. The noun ''law'' derives from the late [[Old English language|Old English]] ''lagu'', meaning something laid down or fixed. see [https://www.etymonli
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  • ...English language and he does have some difficulty in understanding all the English messages and the question is: is this a real handicap? ...eaking is tremendously limited in the use of languages other than American English.
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  • ...heidlower Jesse Sheidlower], the principal American editor of the [[Oxford English Dictionary]], argues that the terms ''hipster'' and ''hippie'' derive from ...-to-date". The Beats adopted the term hip, and early hippies inherited the language and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterculture_of_the_1960s countercultu
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  • ...spring of the original immigrants, because they will have a native English language ability. ...ten these are to dubious websites pedalling new age gear, offering flowery language about new energies and lots of love, but with little hard details or facts.
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  • ...en she can not get a ride to the meeting. This woman also is just learning English.) ...l to know because my image is that the teaching mission is centered in the English speaking world.”
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  • * ''A Greek-English Lexicon'', Henry George Liddell and Robert Scott, revised and augmented thr * ''Webster's New International Dictionary of the English Language, Second Edition, Unabridged'', W.A. Neilson, T.A. Knott, P.W. Carhart (eds.
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  • ==Quantity in natural language== ...eds, million/millions), or cardinal numbers before count nouns. The set of language quantifiers covers "a few, a great number, many, several (for count names);
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  • ...ing companion, Captain Dathon, that he understands the Tamarian metaphoric language. Picard also gives a condensed retelling of the Epic of Gilgamesh. * Mitchell, Stephen (2004). Gilgamesh: A New English Version. New York: Free Press. ISBN 0-7432-6164-X.
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  • ...ions about [[language]] as a learned habit and proposed instead to explain language comprehension in terms of mental grammars consisting of rules. The six thin ...al, but “She the hit ball” and “What does you like?” are not. A grammar of English will explain why the former are acceptable but not the latter.
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  • ...ith her and can give her a few words. From my understanding of the English language, the spiritual name for Emily sounds like Vonna and I would recommend to he ABRAHAM: Certainly. The closest I can relate to you in this language would sound like Zonya, yes. Our connection is weakening. Is there one more
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  • ===Topic: ''Language & Stillness''=== ===='''''[[Language]]'''''====
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  • ...So this is something that I have been thinking the last few years: How did language develop? And I guess that is also influenced by those things we talk about ...have been perpetuated in a rebellion mindset, and new codes for the higher language is being introduced into the human system of consciousness, being woven int
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  • ===='''''[[Language]]''''', '''''[[Gender]]'''''==== ...image as opposed to the [[mother]] [[image]] in my [[language]] and in the language of the [[Urantia Book]]. And let me say that when it is spoken of, [[the Fa
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  • ===='''''[[Language]]''''', '''''[[Teacher Contact]]'''''==== ...at it describes follows, which is not typical for normal conversation in [[English]]. I noticed in the...this is the silly part... in the [https://en.wikipedi
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  • ...ive role in guiding the development of Web standards (such as the [[markup language]]s in which Web pages are composed), and in recent years has advocated his ...ming language)|Java]] itself has become more widely used as a platform and language for [[server-side]] and other programming.
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  • # The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition, 2000, Houghton Mifflin Company.
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  • ...," and the language that it is to be translated into is called the "target language"; the final product is sometimes called the "target text." ...nglais" (French-English), "Spanglish" (Spanish-English), "Poglish" (Polish-English) and "Portuñol" (Portuguese-Spanish).
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  • ...sillusionment]] from a [[linguistic]] inquiry of its pages. Names, and all language are [[metaphors]] -- symbolic designations of realities, couched in greater ...t that "God" is an obvious Anglicism, and certainly [[English]] is not the language of currency in [[Paradise]], no more than is [[Latin]] or [[Hebrew]]. Never
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  • [[English language|English]]-speakers may measure integrity in non-enumerated units called "scraps", s
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  • ...heir prominence among followers of the Kaula path. Published with selected English readings which do not mention the term Yogini, the Kularnava Tantra, in its
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  • ...of other galaxies. The term Milky Way first appeared in the [[English]] [[language]] in a [[poem]] by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoffrey_Chaucer Chaucer]
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  • ...mercial nature. In March 2007, the word ''wiki'' became a newly recognised English word.[https://www.oed.com/help/updates/Prakrit-prim.html] ...year, [[Afrikaans]], [[Norwegian language|Norwegian]], and [[Serbocroatian language|Serbocroatian]] versions were announced.
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  • ...lish language in 1701 and took on its current definition by 1834 ([[Oxford English Dictionary]]). # "organism". Oxford English Dictionary (online ed.). 2004.
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  • The English word "god" comes from Anglo-Saxon, and similar words are found in many Germ ...[monotheistic]] and assert the existence of a unique deity. In the English language, the [[common noun]] ''god'' is equivalent to ''deity'', while ''[[God]]''
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  • ...on with digital mankind and will eventually lead to changes in the English language.
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  • The term '''intentionality''' according to the [[Oxford English Dictionary]], is "the distinguishing property of [[mind]] of being necessar ...operties that distinguish language describing psychological phenomena from language describing non-psychological phenomena. Chisholm's criteria for the intenti
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  • ...arrator, protagonist, and persons; a preeminent example in the [[English]] language can be found in [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Joyce James Joyce]'s n
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  • ...vibrations. These vibrations you translate into the words of the English language. You see my child, you must of necessity see in a different way. You must
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  • ...ome within this nation, and in the Western Hemisphere and Western Europe. Language is not specifically an issue at this point. ...ent conveys words in your language. It is the “harp” of language; it is a language harp. I do not need that here, for I am speaking through this mortal as an
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  • ...fact for people belonging to any group or nationality, regardless of which language they speak or which part of the hemisphere they come from. The Galilean pro ...eak as though reality is contrasted with existence itself, though ordinary language and many other philosophers would treat these as synonyms. They have in [[
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  • '''''Nevi'im''''' [נביאים] ([[Hebrew (language)|Heb]]: '''Prophets''') is the second of the three major sections in the '' ...very complex prophecy about this servant, that is written in a very poetic language. Although there is still the mention of judgment of false worshippers and i
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  • ...it, especially for words and phrases that have become well-established in English. The pinyin romanization Daodejing originated in the late 20th century, and ...strength", or "integrity." The [[semantics]] of this Chinese word resemble English virtue, which developed from a (now archaic) sense of "inner potency" or "[
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  • ...symbolize the logical relationships involved in particular aspects of the language -- such as [[modal logic]], which deals with [[modal qualifier]]s like "pos *[[Philosophy of language]]: the study of the concepts of [[Meaning (linguistic)|meaning]] and [[trut
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  • ...]] are [[universal]]. Love whether it is said in English or Spanish or any language means the same. ...ny way that you could enlarge upon this, with the [[limitations]] of our [[language]]. ?
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  • ...mastery, self-reproach, and self-sacrifice — are no longer in fashion. The language most in favor is that which exalts the self — self-expression, self-asser ...f-esteem; self-respect" in The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition, 2000. Online at https://www.bartleby.com/61/58/S0245800.ht
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  • ...ainly, one moment. Marin, to the best of my understanding with the English language, your name sounds like Kara. I am pleased to get to know your bubbly person
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  • ...later your soul, your body and your mind will begin to understand this new language that speaks to you. You will begin to understand the subtle messages that r ...sters in China? It has been suggested that maybe we just go ahead with the English book while expressing in our hearts what Sonship is? Is that a good thing o
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  • ...uage are sometimes considered to be part of the arts, for example as the [[language arts]]. ...ac Newton]], have written their own [[colour theory]]. Moreover the use of language is only a generalisation for a colour equivalent. The word "[[red]]", for e
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  • MONJORONSON: Certainly. First, the language must use good grammar, that your sentence structure, paragraph structure, c ...be translated into other languages, or is English, being the most dominant language, could we just leave our material in this form?
    20 KB (3,514 words) - 21:11, 27 December 2010
  • # "kreus-", The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition: Appendix I: Indo-European Roots, 2000, https://www.bartleb
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  • ...into its moral norms, [[attitude]]s, [[values]], motives, social roles, [[language]] and [[symbols]] is the ‘means by which social and cultural continuity a ...ham White (1977: 5), reacting to the functionalist notion of socialization English sociologist
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  • ...rit]]? I know we as humans many times pray audibly to [[God]] in our own [[language]], but there is such a thing I have been told and in [[reading]] in the [[B ...yers better when I am praying in the spirit rather than when I am in the [[English]] tongue. So even though I don't pray in the spirit as often as I [[feel]]
    21 KB (3,732 words) - 22:58, 12 December 2020
  • ...ic adjustments that these revelations were materialized in the [[English]] language on Urantia.) Such potential contact mortals of the evolutionary worlds are
    9 KB (1,383 words) - 22:38, 12 December 2020
  • ...tianity) from French ''théologie'', from Latin ''theologia'', from [[Greek language|Greek]]: θεολογία, ''theologia'', from θεός, ''theos'' or [[God ...uery=entry%3D%2348216&layout=&loc=qeologiko%2Fs Lidell and Scott's ''Greek-English Lexicon']'.</ref>
    23 KB (3,401 words) - 02:44, 13 December 2020
  • ...tments that these [[revelations]] were [[materialized]] in the [[English]] language on [[Urantia]].) Such [[potential]] [[contact]] [[mortals]] of the [https:/
    11 KB (1,602 words) - 22:59, 12 December 2020
  • ...ionary]], the earliest historical meaning of the word ''information'' in [[English]] was the act of ''informing'', or giving form or shape to the mind, as in ...ch this may have influenced the development of the word ''information'' in English is unclear.
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  • ABRAHAM: One moment. I say with what I know of your [[English]] language it is pronounced Andor. It is with the [[meaning]] of [[steadfastness]] and
    9 KB (1,462 words) - 23:24, 21 April 2013
  • ...ack stems from. One moment. In the closest possible use of the [[English]] language, you are known On High as Marshall. Welcome to the Correcting Time. (Thank
    9 KB (1,573 words) - 22:59, 27 September 2013
  • ...t your world is becoming one culture with many languages. Yet, the binary language of bits and bytes is the underlying basis for your new global culture. It ...aries containing sustainable design information be maintained in all major language bases, to be readily available throughout the world, into every country tha
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  • ...ch provided Fénelon with a thorough grounding in the [[Ancient Greek|Greek language]] and [[classics]]. In 1667, at age 12, he was sent to the [[University of ...orks that he composed for the duke was his ''Les Aventures de Télémaque'' (English ''The Adventures of Telemachus, Son of Ulysses''), written in 1693-94. On
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  • ...Melchizedek]]. We indited these narratives and put them in the [[English]] language, by a technique authorized by our superiors, in the year [https://www.wikip
    11 KB (1,520 words) - 23:38, 12 December 2020
  • ...nder of the armed forces. In fact, the Latin word, imperator, gives us the English word emperor. In monotheistic religions such as Christianity (where the official language, Latin, used terms as ''Imperium Dei/Domini'') the Divine is held to have a
    20 KB (3,184 words) - 00:07, 13 December 2020
  • ...se of the term “clinic”—is it different in South America than that term in English, because we think of clinics more in terms of medical health and dealing wi
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  • .../index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English], from Anglo-French, from Latin contemptus, from contemnere # (2000). The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Ed. Houghton Mifflin Company.
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  • ABRAHAM: The closest sound in which I can say to you using the [[English]] language is Emily, yes, Emily. (Thank you.) You're welcome. Another question?
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  • ...to teach or attend class -- perhaps the last vestige of this historically English practice in North America. Similarly, the Highlanders and Wellingtons "dri ...'Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser'' (''The Emperor's Hymn'', known in English language hymnals as "Austria"), by [[Joseph Haydn]].[https://itw.sewanee.edu/Music1
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  • ...ptual options are seemingly unavailable to your mind; it is only that your language and your culture do not have a way of expressing these concepts in ways tha ...three core values. The three core values are represented by your words in English by the urging to seek a better quality of life, and the necessity of growin
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  • ...erybody on December 25th find a copy of it there in their home in whatever language it is they speak and read. ...ife. How about 800 pages of a day-to-day description of his life in modern language?” How does that sound?
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  • ...o contemporary concerns. His central preoccupations are still pertinent: [[language]], [[knowledge]], the nature of the [[human]] [[person]], [[sexuality]] and ...ued on twentieth century German thinkers, particularly those interested in language. His popularity has increased dramatically in the last few decades amongst
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  • The word has many uses in the [[English]] [[language]], popularly meaning "knowledge of the [[paranormal]]", as opposed to "know # Crabb, G. (1927). English synonyms explained, in alphabetical order, with copious illustrations and e
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  • ...Good afternoon. Welcome.) I am not sure my name is pronounceable in your [[English]]—no matter. I would like to begin with a question. Is there someone who Teacher: It is similar to the problem in language of sex and love, "Let’s go make love," when what is meant is "Let’s go
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  • ...d man]]/healer or is it Ochotiwa? She is [[transmitting]] in an unfamiliar language. How can she best serve the Father now? ...u are freer. Combine this [[feeling]], this experience when you transmit [[English]] and see how much easier your transmissions become.
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  • ...ʁd]) means "advance guard" or "vanguard".[1] The adjective form is used in English, to refer to people or works that are [[experiment]]al or innovative, parti ...from [[Dada]] through the Situationists to postmodern artists such as the Language poets in the 1980s.[2]
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  • ...u respond. This is one of the reasons we have been working in the realm of language, to help you reorient how you process information--how you use your thought ...medium of our mind is the language. In German it’s dinken and danken, in English it’s you think and you thank. I see a relationship between mindful think
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  • ...ara, yes, Tara. That is as close as I can give you using the [[English]] [[language]]. (Thank you so much.) You are welcome. (Eleana sends her love.) Send her
    10 KB (1,804 words) - 23:35, 12 December 2020
  • ...human language. I implore you to not be limited by the limitations of the English alphabet, but to see beyond the literal into the ethereal or figurative are
    10 KB (1,844 words) - 20:06, 27 December 2010
  • One meaning of the English word ''novel'' has remained stable: "novel" can still signify what is new o ...rise of the novel, occurred across Europe, though only the Spanish and the English went one step further and allowed the word ''novel'' (Spanish: ''novela'')
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  • ===='''''[[Language]]'''''==== ...our meditative times and they are more capable of explaining in your human language what that is like than I am. To say it is “other worldly” is to state
    33 KB (5,634 words) - 16:59, 23 April 2012
  • ...glish speakers in each and every culture, ethnic group and nationality and language group that will take those materials and translate them for you to assist t
    31 KB (5,624 words) - 13:14, 13 January 2018
  • ...per on that, but I was just wondering if you could help me out with some [[language]] where that is part of the...how did [[Jesus]] say it, that is something f ...ing is not a part of their [[belief]] system. It is..so you can't use that language if you are going to speak to that kind of a person. That is what I am wrest
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  • ...[philology]], which attempted to map the change over time of sounds in a [[language]]. ...y]] and [[Ethnography]]. The word anthropos (άνθρωπος) is from the [[Greek language|Greek]] for "human being" or "person." [[Eric Wolf]] described sociocultura
    36 KB (5,164 words) - 02:35, 13 December 2020
  • The word is from Old [[English]] godsibb, from god and sibb, the term for godparents, i.e. a child's godfa *further mutual social grooming (like many other uses of language, only more so)
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  • ...r. In some ways it more closely resembles what everyday [[English language|English]]-speakers call "[[Social influence|influence]]", although some authors (li ...h words mean "to be able", and this meaning reflects on the meaning of the English word "power". A second French word is "''puissance''", which means more pot
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  • ...[ideal]]s of your tomorrow. I am sure you would take more comfort if my [[language]] were all pure colonial Virginian. That, however, is not at all my point from your future and using such language common to you now that may lift and heal the [[soul]] of America. Yours is
    15 KB (2,600 words) - 22:30, 12 December 2020
  • ...l system]]s of [[inference]] and through the study of arguments in natural language. The field of logic ranges from core topics such as the study of [[fallaci ...ormal' in "formal logic" is commonly used in an ambiguous manner. Symbolic language is just one kind of formal logic, and is distinguished from another kind of
    33 KB (4,933 words) - 01:20, 13 December 2020
  • French panthéisme, from panthéiste pantheist, from [[English]] pantheist, from pan- + [[Greek]] theos god ...erse]] God does not [[explain]] anything, but only serves "to enrich our [[language]] with a superfluous synonym for the word 'world'" (p. 40). Pantheists are
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  • ...[language]], but you [[understand]] that I am dealing with the [[English]] language in and through a publican, so you must take me as I am until and unless we ...vant things, but I find it quite delightful. I don't think I could learn a language quite so well as you have.
    31 KB (5,325 words) - 23:28, 12 December 2020
  • LinEL: Again, this is a question which revolves around your [[English]] [[language]]'s use of a single [[word]] to [[describe]] a vast range of [[experience]]
    13 KB (2,221 words) - 23:01, 12 December 2020
  • ...rapped up and accessible by way of your comfortable and spontaneous use of language/thought within yourself. ...ndamental human reality, moment to moment. If you’ve lived many years now, language and thought have become such unconscious and comfortable tools you may neve
    25 KB (4,511 words) - 18:36, 26 December 2010
  • # The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company. 2000. ...ictions Then, Now, and in the (Imagined) Future", Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, Vol. 55, No. 2 (2001), pp. 25–47 (30f.)
    22 KB (3,093 words) - 12:48, 2 August 2009
  • ...up in it--what causes what; what determines what. This is part of the very language and its concepts you learned.
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  • AT&T developed a programming language called "Hancock" which is able to sift through enormous databases of phone # "Is the U.S. Turning Into a Surveillance Society?" (in English). American Civil Liberties Union. https://www.aclu.org/privacy/gen/index.ht
    58 KB (8,353 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...debt to Roman law although Roman law exercised much less influence on the English legal system than on the legal systems of the continent. The influence of R ...on it are usually referred to as [[civil law (legal system)|civil law]] in English-speaking countries.
    27 KB (4,354 words) - 01:49, 13 December 2020
  • ...ncepts]] which I come to portray at times have no [[relationship]] to your language. You have no [[experience]] to associate with the concept. ...what [[intuitive]]. It's [[difficult]] to [[describe]] or encapsulate in [[language]]. I [[perceive]] [[faith]] as [[dynamic]] in the sense that it is ever- ch
    53 KB (9,224 words) - 23:02, 12 December 2020
  • ...d philosophy. [[Paulin J. Hountondji]] has argued that, without a written language: “thousands of Socrates could never have given birth to Greek philosophy. ...ared beliefs, values, categories, and assumptions that are implicit in the language, practices, and beliefs of African cultures; in short, the uniquely African
    19 KB (2,915 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...rtunately as well, the [[language]], the [[English]] language, or whatever language you are using to communicate, is imperfect also. It is sloppy. If it is s
    22 KB (3,908 words) - 14:13, 26 January 2021
  • ...t about you. In the closest possible pronunciation using the [[English]] [[language]], your name sounds like Amanda. We look forward to having a long friendshi
    11 KB (2,083 words) - 17:40, 26 December 2010
  • ...tual name and that is as close as I can pronounce it using the [[English]] language. There will be a slight [[difference]] in sound once you have gone from [[t
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  • ...s from the 6th century [[Christianity|Christian]] [[Codex Argenteus]]. The English word itself descends from the Proto-Germanic *''ǥuđan''. Most linguists a ...nces that are implied by these different names, "God" remains the common [[English]] translation for all.
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  • '''Oracle of Delphi''' ([[Greek language|Greek]] Δελφοί}}, [ðe̞lˈfi]) The name ''Delphi'' is pronounced, in the English manner, as "Delf-eye" or in the Greek manner, as "Delfee" depending on regi
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  • ...ut some scholars strictly distinguish the terms. The term has been used in English since the 19th century. The newest edition of the OED distinguishes the mea ...atural phenomenon", citing the ''Westminster Review'' of 1830 as the first English attestation. Earlier editions of the OED also present this quote as the ear
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  • ...nslated for me by your close friend, and I know that it is translated into English, not of course my favorite French of olden days, or these days.
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  • ...en, prayen,''and ''preien'' around 1290, recorded in ''The early'' ''South-English Legendary'' I. 112/200: ''And preide is fader wel ȝ erne,'' in the sense o The word came to English from Old French ''preier,'' "to request" (first seen in ''La Séquence de S
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  • ...The book was written specifically for this reason, to enable you to get a language within you that comprehends all these different facets of your human life a ...ish first, and then I will read the English version. As you know, my first language is Spanish and the audience here speaks Spanish, so I am reading it in Span
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  • ...atin origins are clear, various dictionaries trace its first appearance in English to the mid-sixteenth century, although in some cases as early as 1387.[http ...n]], [[philosophy of mind]], [[philosophy of perception]], [[philosophy of language]], and [[philosophy of science]].
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  • ...d has been described as "arguably the most distinguished man of letters in English history".[https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/14918] He is also the sub ...=lives+of+the+most+eminent+english+poets#PPP2,M1 Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets]'', a collection of biographies and evaluations of 17th- and 18th-cen
    71 KB (11,230 words) - 02:36, 13 December 2020
  • ...e will be one [[language]], most likely [[English]], which will become the language of all peoples and cultural [[differences]] will also lessen as the [[citiz
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  • ...h]] revealers have been authorized to [[translate]] into the [[English]] [[language]] of [[Urantia]]. ...ce new terms only when the concept to be portrayed finds no terminology in English which can be employed to convey such a new concept partially or even with m
    61 KB (8,545 words) - 01:20, 13 December 2020
  • ...the word joy or joyful. On a deeper level they are nearly synonymous. The English word that comes to My mind most readily, describing the joyful or happy emo ...onia comes from. Of course these are both just word-symbols in the English language as a close human approximation of what is on many other worlds and in many
    21 KB (3,881 words) - 13:37, 27 December 2010
  • ....[3] The [[English]] term originally comes from the term angr of Old Norse language.[4] ...nal expression of anger can be found in facial [[expression]]s, [[body]] [[language]], physiological responses, and at times in [[public]] [[act]]s of aggressi
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  • ...break upon your personal [[reality]] but as you [[ponder]] the (how your [[language]] detracts!) . .. I therefore commend Daniel his words this evening and ret ...o announce the [[new age]] has come." My [[terminology]], or I guess the [[language]] with which I am most familiar is, you know, "[[the Kingdom]] of God is at
    27 KB (4,375 words) - 23:28, 12 December 2020
  • ...that’s quite a curveball you’re throwing at me because in all the English language, there probably is, unfortunately, no more hackneyed expression, yet at the We’ve taught that the one English word that stands for Deity--for God’s nature, for the nature of Creative
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  • ...Danish name Tyge Ottesen Brahe is pronounced in Modern Standard [[Danish language|Danish]] as [ˈtˢy.y ˈʌ.d̥ə.sn̩ ˈb̥ʁɑ.ʊ] ...Full digital facsimile, the [[Danish Royal Library]]. Includes Danish and English translations.
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  • ...otes that over his lifetime, Americans seemed increasingly foul with their language and sloppy with their dress. He asks, “Is there a model of modesty or mo ...provides a much more informed perspective about the phenomena of dress and language.
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  • If you get the notion from time to time it’s all too marvelous to capture in language, you’re right. And so we tease you with how much more there is awaiting y ...a way that, to begin to understand it with this blunt tool of the English language, necessitates fracturing that unity into seemingly separate functions. The
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  • ...of the clergy and the nobility. This idea was extended and refined by the English barony when they forced [[John of England|John]] to sign the ''[[Magna Car This provision became the cornerstone of English liberty after that point. The [[social contract]] in the original case was
    39 KB (5,756 words) - 23:42, 12 December 2020
  • ...n procedures and requirements, for instance, fluent understanding of the [[language]], or the ability to test jurors or otherwise exclude jurors who might be p ...the jury of local men, and the royal justices ushered in the era of the [[English Common Law]]. Sheriffs prepared cases for trial and found jurors with relev
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  • ...cuyell of the Historyes of Troye was the first book printed in the English language ...tulus Animae, polonice believed to be the first book printed in the Polish language.
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  • ...on matures, Lacan claims that they still feel separated from themselves by language, which is incomplete, and so a person continually strives to become whole. ...Position, and Gender in Jane Eyre and Pickwick Papers Benjamin Graves '97 (English 73 Brown University, 1996)
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  • ...ergy/material, and mind, and spirit; and others we cannot describe in your language. Even materially you will always have a great relationship with stuff, for A lot of this sounds strange when it’s put into the English language this way, but I’m sure when you reflect on this and reread it, a lot of t
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  • ..., we want to apply them to audiences that become excited with them, in the language that is most broadly known throughout the world. I hope this answers your ===='''''[[Language]]'''''====
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  • ...how they engage with one another is of endless fascination for me. And so, language is a very important factor in how people get along and on your world the pr ...bogged down as a result of the use of language … the use and the misuse of language. It is not a new habit for humankind to insult their fellows or praise thei
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  • Alana : Thank you. (Alana asks N, who speaks little [[English]], if she has any questions, if she [[understands]] everything. Tape is not ...ld that person, as your beloved [[TR]] did, suddenly begin to speak our "[[language]]," as you might put it. So my friend, you are concerned for your [[chemica
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  • What you call history—dependant upon the development of language, has been the story of how human minds have been more and more capable of c ...ations expressing human experience with ever greater precision, developing language to communicate not only with each other, but right within yourself. This is
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  • ...skoxford.com/concise_oed/person?view=uk Person], from the ''Compact Oxford English Dictionary''. In modern usage, the term "person" is subject to dispute and ...istent [[personal identity (philosophy)|personal identity]]. The [[England|English]] philosopher [[John Locke]] defined a person as "a thinking intelligent Be
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  • ...eaking in tongues,” then we anticipate they would also accept “speaking in English,” with the intent and meaning very clear to them.
    24 KB (3,977 words) - 19:04, 5 May 2014
  • ...ms of the [[extreme]] ranges of -- I am not very good with the [[English]] language unless I am feeling [[inspired]], and I am not, so I will resort to words l
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  • '''Knowledge''' is defined [[Oxford English Dictionary]] variously as (i) facts, information, and skills acquired by a Situational knowledge is often embedded in language, culture, or traditions.
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  • ...ppeared in Locke's works, but the word itself first appeared in the French language.
    14 KB (2,078 words) - 23:42, 12 December 2020
  • ...backyard in the [[language]] of angels to begin with and then that into [[English]]. I am wondering what can I do to serve this man? I felt the [[Spirit of T
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  • * Language acquisition modules ...from former slaves), and the immigration of Europeans, especially Spanish, English, French, Portuguese, German, Irish, Italian and Dutch.
    36 KB (5,216 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...anings which vary according to the [[context]] of its use. The [[English]] language is not as sophisticated as some other languages on [[this planet]] that hav ...more about is the fourth meaning. It has been designated in the [[Greek]] language as '[[Agape]]'. It is a [[different]] concept, for there is no ingestion of
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  • ...nt will be compared. Next, brief considerations on a minimal definition of language will be followed by a look at the suddenness and revelatory aspects of its hypothesis per se—that human language, and with it, humanity itself, came into being in an event—has a higher l
    55 KB (8,507 words) - 01:21, 13 December 2020
  • * Language acquisition modules ...from former slaves), and the immigration of Europeans, especially Spanish, English, French, Portuguese, German, Irish, Italian and Dutch.
    36 KB (5,226 words) - 23:47, 12 December 2020
  • ..., French, Spanish, English, Korean, Russian, Chinese, Farsi, or some other language group.
    33 KB (5,171 words) - 23:35, 12 December 2020
  • ...s which the life of man raises, and it will not do to go behind this plain language and thought and wrest them to the service of our fancy. But there is this m ...d [[Sanskrit]] [[words]] and passages signify, and their presentation in [[English]] depending on the sampradaya they are affiliated to. Especially in Western
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  • ...scribes follows, which is not typical for [[normal]] [[conversation]] in [[English]]. I noticed in the...this is the silly part... in the [https://en.wikipedi ...so this particular way of speaking was applied long, long ago. As mortal [[language]] [[changed]] I do suppose some of us teachers did not. And we will still s
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  • ...eedom through this conception of the world as process. Despite the Kantian language of Schelling’s System, he did not share the Kantian preoccupation with th ...ic to these ideas. This direct influence was acknowledged only recently in English literature on Bakhtin by Caryl Emerson who indicated that, amongst the sou
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  • ...d believed that both Renaissance and Baroque architecture "spoke" the same language - that of classical Greek and Rome - though with different dialects. ...onsible for establishing art history as a legitimate field of study in the English-speaking world, and the influence of Panofsky's methodology, in particular,
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  • ...'. The root meaning is of obscure origin though shown to be akin to modern English 'over' and modern German 'über' (OE ''ofer'') and 'up' (OE ''up'', ''upp'' ...off our feelings towards the person we are harming. He cites the use of [[language]] in Nazi Germany as being a key to how the German people were able to do t
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  • ...ized meaning of "mankind", but creates problems with rendering pronouns in English translation. On the seventh day God rests from the task of completing the h ...gurat of Babylon the etymology is incorrect, as the Akkadian "Babilu", the English Babylon, means "Gate of God" [https://bible.thelineberrys.com/GEN/GEN11.HTM
    50 KB (8,253 words) - 00:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...s universal language of communicating from the universe. It will not be in English, it will be in a form of communication that is universal to your species an
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  • ...steners the desire above all to do some good, he frequently used unusual [[language]] or seemed to stray from the path of [[orthodoxy]]. His unorthodox teachin ...rs. Interestingly, one of the pioneer translators of Eckhart's writings to English, [[Maurice O'Connell Walshe]], was also an accomplished translator of Buddh
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  • Jean Pierre Houtier, from Texas who came to translate Moussa’s lessons into English at a class that ...nd their spirits are very spritely. Both speak good English as that is the language of their country and they are sweet, humble and enthusiastic about the Uran
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  • Yes, sometimes the English language fails me. And when that happens we punt; or we get clever; or we - like Na
    16 KB (3,127 words) - 17:06, 23 December 2010
  • ...ollins Publishers, 2003, hardcover 480 pages, ISBN 0-06-621173-5</ref> The English word [[clock]] actually comes from French, Latin, and German words that mea ...'', and is used as the modern [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] equivalent to the English word "time".)
    27 KB (4,252 words) - 02:42, 13 December 2020
  • ...ook]] was brought. There was a [[purpose]] for the Book to be written in [[English]], and with its being in your lap, so to speak, there is a certain [[respon
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  • N : Thank you. I don’t know if I understood all (N is learning English), but I thank you. ...vior that you know a universe of love. Whether or not you use a particular language or speak with a particular sound, the sounds, the pathway, the avenues, the
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  • The first of what in [[English]] are called the [[Four Noble Truths]] is the [[truth]] of suffering or duk ...g God's attributes are [[mercy]] and compassion or, in the [[canonical]] [[language]] of Arabic, Rahman and Rahim. Each of the 114 chapters of [[the Qu'ran]],
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  • ...on the object twisted, merged and separated. [[Intelligent]] lines -- a [[language]] of light. The light slowly entered her and she could feel the surge of [[ ...telepathic]] abilities. Why else would they construct such a [[complex]] [[language]]?"
    44 KB (7,274 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...ly when I was younger -- with great anxiety about that transition, but our language has something to do with conditioning the way we view that, I think. ...guages, especially those of European countries, but in the Native American language, there is no such word. We never say "good-bye." It's always (in Cherokee)
    32 KB (6,025 words) - 22:53, 26 December 2010
  • The [[Oxford English Dictionary]] records its earliest known [[English]]-language usage of "brainwashing" in an article by Edward Hunter in New Leader publis ...hinese into Ranks of Communist Party." It was the first printed use in any language of the term "brainwashing," which quickly became a stock phrase in Cold War
    27 KB (3,895 words) - 23:41, 12 December 2020
  • ...ronounced: ʃaː.kjə.mʊ.nɪ or '''Shakyamuni''' (Skt.; Pali: '''Sakyamuni'''; English: “sage of the [[Shakya]] clan”), is the key figure in Buddhism, and acc ==Language==
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  • ...evening. I have been [[thinking]] about the trait that in your [[English]] language you term, "[[faithfulness]]", and how it relates to my [[colleague]]'s prev
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  • ...As you grew up and you picked up the culture into which you were born--the language and the way things were there interrelated--all this became part of your un ...ife with mine,” and a name will occur to you. It may be some very familiar English word, or it may be something rather strange to you; but just think on it fo
    30 KB (5,210 words) - 18:11, 22 August 2013
  • ...ny enjoyable [[stories]] of children who do not understand the [[English]] language, but who sincerely respond to their misunderstandings. We all laugh at thei
    19 KB (3,298 words) - 23:32, 12 December 2020
  • ...moment]]. You will [[agree]] there are many [[words]] in the [[English]] [[language]] that have lost their true [[meaning]], have lost their true [[worth]]. Sp
    25 KB (4,180 words) - 22:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...ere. They were no more intelligent than he was; in fact, on the subject of language, he was the world's authority -- even if no one outside of the ACIO knew it ...explains the probable purpose of this artifact. Moreover, we know from our language analysis that the glyphs are not referenced in our Cyrus database. They are
    23 KB (3,906 words) - 21:40, 21 January 2010
  • ...cajoled him into the chairman’s seat, he went away quite well in his own [[language]]; we even gave him a round of [[applause]], which did him a lot of [[good]
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  • # Vitruvius on Architecture, Book IX, paragraphs 9-12, translated into English and in the original Latin. ...ideas about the [[constitution]] of the [[universe]] through a hermetic [[language]] full of [[esoteric]] [[words]], phrases and signs designed to cloak their
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  • ...productions have garnered huge audiences of the nations that do not speak English. So too, it is a possibility that other cultures, other nations, other language-based cultures would be interested in this material. Other nations accept
    35 KB (5,963 words) - 22:06, 12 December 2020
  • ...Europe, Asia, China, and even Russia? Because today we are concentrated on English speaking to promote The Urantia Book, but what is your recommendation or su ...and then taking on the arduous task of making that work available in their language. So, this is not something that's going to happen overnight, but it needs t
    54 KB (9,868 words) - 16:06, 30 November 2023
  • #"Geography". The American Heritage Dictionary/ of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company. Retrieved on October 9, 2006.
    20 KB (2,833 words) - 00:55, 13 December 2020
  • ...stance, just ink symbols on paper. But the moment you start to read it in English, instantaneously you are responding to it in a way very unique to you.
    22 KB (3,975 words) - 12:04, 4 February 2021
  • ...ay be useful and valid without being factual; when we apply [[time-space]] language to pre-time-space reality we can never grasp actual fact but we can still h ...ing. Suppose we forget all about "eternity" and use some comfortable "time language." If we do this we will discover there are three basic and distinct "source
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  • ...ginning of me opening statement when I said speak your truth and speak the language of love. Shade it and pay whatever price you decide to pay. ...ly Creating]]. “Truth” was the first, the one word, because Truth, in any language, is spelled G-O-D, and G-O-D is the reflection of Love. So, Truth, my frie
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  • ...]] was one of those that proved to be the most difficult to [[express]] in language and was therefore among the last to find an unambiguous term. Classical [[L # Zelos, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, "A Greek-English Lexicon", at Perseus
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  • ===The English Church in British North America (1497-1775)=== ...d. In any case, Cabot sailed under the authority of King Henry VII and the English Church was still firmly Roman Catholic.
    60 KB (9,204 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...can be spoken as potential or as actual, particular or generic. The same [[language]] refers to the effects of causes; so that [[generic]] effects assigned to ...y one's own existence, is the first step toward becoming the "Übermensch" (English: "overman" or "superman") that [[Nietzsche]] speaks of extensively in his p
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  • :Precise instructions (in language understood by "the computer") for a "fast, efficient, good" ''process'' tha ...age statements, while remaining independent of a particular implementation language. Programming languages are primarily intended for expressing algorithms in
    49 KB (7,317 words) - 23:40, 12 December 2020
  • ...e of children. They [[mind]] their [[behaviors]] better; they mind their [[language]] better, and this is what I call to your mind and ask of you to [[think]] ...[[choice]], he can teach then, or she can teach, through accessing your [[language]] center and utilizing your vocal mechanisms, but it is not the mortal who
    39 KB (6,530 words) - 23:19, 12 December 2020
  • ...ught in the [[Oveyssi-Shahmaghsoudi]] Sufi order. Tamarkoz is a [[Persian language|Persian]] term that means ‘concentration,’ referring to the “concentr The [[Jainism|Jains]] use the word [[Samayika]], a word in the [[Prakrit]] language derived from the word samay (time), to denote the practice of meditation. T
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  • ...ving beings to help you along; in this case something put into the English language in the mid and late 1930’s. The authors were fully cognizant of your tho
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  • ...r example, [[De amore]] (or ''The Art of Courtly Love'', as it is known in English) written in the 12th century lists such rules as "''Marriage is no real exc ...ish]] word "romance" developed from a vernacular dialect within the French language, meaning "verse narrative", referring to the style of speech and writing, a
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  • ...to less [[complications]]. Let me state this in a little bit [[clearer]] [[language]]. ...ords]]. I think I am probably looking forward to the actual workshop (in [[English]]) more than I can possibly think about. I think my [[anxiety]] is the very
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  • ...nciples and that could be observed empirically. In some ways, studying the language, culture, physiology, and artifacts of European colonies was not unlike stu ...with multiple, distinct cultures, often very different in organization and language from those of Europe, has led to a continuing emphasis on [[cross-cultural
    55 KB (7,711 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...rit and I do face somewhat of a difficulty in communicating in the English language here, but I do think you realize what we are sometimes wrapping up in a sen
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  • ...e to put forth our concepts through the [[transmitter]] receivers into the language that you can [[understand]]. And I must add “translators” for there are ...se realities which go beyond words, extend beyond cultures, reach beyond [[language]], out step even the [[ideologies]] of [[politics]] and differences which d
    32 KB (5,681 words) - 23:38, 12 December 2020
  • ...be able to interpret or feel the answers so that they can be given into a language that is more understandable to the a musical 'language,' I'd guess. But from that last answer, I can
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  • '''Messiah''' (Hebrew מָשִׁיח Mašíaḥ or Māšîªḥ; in modern Jewish texts in English sometimes spelled ''Moshiach''; Aramaic: '''משיחא''', Aramaic/Syriac: ...en him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom, that all people, nations, and [[language]]s, should serve him: his dominion is an everlasting dominion, which shall
    19 KB (3,158 words) - 01:26, 13 December 2020
  • ...[[Bestowal Son]]. And I am thinking the word [[grace]] in our [[English]] language is kind of in contrast to ferocious, [[angry]], or to be gracious is the op
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  • So, the fact that the revelation of The Urantia Book came to America, to English speaking people who are rooted in perhaps one particular wisdom tradition d ...avoid the kinds of things that it was revealing and to have to use English language to do it primarily to have it not have a pretty intellectual tone—it does
    37 KB (6,887 words) - 16:45, 4 February 2024
  • ...to be battled, [[struggled]] with and [[conquered]]. Even your [[English]] language, as it was used in the presentation of the [[Urantia Papers]], conveys misl
    22 KB (3,644 words) - 23:26, 12 December 2020
  • ...as that spiritual feeling, but not being able to express it in my English language. I am beginning to feel that.
    26 KB (4,819 words) - 22:03, 23 February 2013
  • ...ve little hands out there to play with things. Slowly, slowly you get some language and ideas start to happen. This is all in your soul. You can visit this in ...e primates, the great apes, to respond to over three hundred word and body-language kind of signals, right? I mean, they can respond when you initiate that. Bu
    48 KB (8,824 words) - 21:26, 23 July 2012
  • ...s://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/50014052 atheist] predates ''atheism'' in English, being first attested in about 1571. ''Atheist'' as a label of practical go ...atedly the applied [[structuralism]] of [[Lévi-Strauss]] sourced religious language to the human subconscious in denying its transcendental meaning. [[J. N. Fi
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  • ...ll this be more of a mind to mind connection, do they understand and speak English?
    26 KB (4,727 words) - 19:24, 8 July 2012
  • The form of the word long fluctuated in various languages. The English language had the alternates, "perfection" and the Biblical "perfectness."[2] ...h "parfait" and "perfection"; the Italian "perfetto" and "perfezione"; the English "perfect" and "perfection"; the Russian "совершенный" (sovyershe
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  • I) Staff Shall Speak the Official Language of English ...44 staff members are conversant with English and that will be the official language
    91 KB (16,223 words) - 18:43, 5 May 2014
  • ...'''[[Apocalypse]] of John''', (literally, ''apocalypse of John''; [[Greek language|Greek]], Αποκαλυψις Ιωαννου, ''Apokalupsis Iōannou'') is ...s is "The Apocalypse of the [[theologian]]" (ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΨΙΣ ΤΟΥ ΘΕΟΛΟΓΟΥ). (In English, ''apocalypse'' is often rendered as ''revelation'' and the literal meaning
    37 KB (5,704 words) - 02:41, 13 December 2020
  • ...on'' can also refer to society as a whole. To nineteenth-century [[England|English]] [[anthropology|anthropologist]] [[Edward Burnett Tylor]], for example, ci ...to be felt across Western Europe. In 1388, the word ''civil'' appeared in English meaning "of or related to citizens". In 1704, ''civilization'' began to mea
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  • ...ht we'd see if you gentlemen wanted to join us." She put just enough of an English accent on the word "gentlemen" to remind them both of her Cambridge educati "Under the circumstances, gibberish may be the only language of choice." Neruda smiled disarmingly and poured himself another cup of cof
    21 KB (3,657 words) - 21:42, 21 January 2010
  • "What's it say?" Emily asked, well aware that Neruda could read virtually any language. "Cool, now we're talking," Andrews said. "They speak my language. Let me see it."
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  • ...them as well. We surmise that our transmitter heard the names but not the English tense that the two moons existed in the past and not now.''] ...ell there are few misunderstandings that arise, even with the lack of body language when speaking and even with the deficiency of intonation.
    79 KB (13,409 words) - 23:39, 12 December 2020
  • ...It is [[evident]] that you have a good grasp on not only the [[English]] [[language]], but on the heartfelt [[qualities]] of [[expression]] that allow for thes
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  • ...atience and so, most people don't care about the strength [of the] English language - spelling and grammar and all of that. So, I haven't really had any compet ...of God's love and support is...I don't have a word to describe it in your language...it is simply there. Use it. Be not afraid to act humbly, knowing that you
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  • indicted in the [[English]] [[language]] sometime in the second quarter of the [[Magisterial Mission]]’s stay
    27 KB (4,166 words) - 23:37, 12 December 2020
  • ...text was of a more philosophical nature. I was the first one to read their language. Once we unlocked the optical disc, we printed out eight thousand forty-fiv ...were translations indexes that enabled their text to print out in perfect English, or about sixty other languages. It took us a two days to figure out how to
    106 KB (18,324 words) - 22:09, 21 January 2010
  • ...ch we haven't yet attained: we haven't the single [[language]], although [[English]] seems to be coming along to that [[point]]; we don't have a single [[gove
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  • JT: I have a listener who is on the call, but for whom English is a second language, and he asks: As it is known, there are many alternative therapies that use ...Lastly, what is grossly missing from your global civilization and from all language groups and nations are two things, and they are both related. One is a glob
    40 KB (7,140 words) - 20:49, 12 July 2020
  • In [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]], the word traditionally translated as ''prophet'' is נְבִיא The [[Qur'an]] identifies a number of men as ''Prophets of Islam'' ([[Arabic language|Arabic]]: nabee نبي ; pl. anbiyaa ''أنبياء'' ). [[Muslims]] believ
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  • [[English]] language nor any language that we [[recognize]]. God's [[communication]] is [[spirit]] to spirit;
    45 KB (7,137 words) - 23:02, 12 December 2020
  • ...6.12; 62.8, 15; 66.14. See J. Robinson (ed.), ''The Nag Hammadi Library in English'', Harper & Row 1977, pp. 131-151.) There is speculation and biblical indic ...ede (in 1901) (W. Wrede, ''Das Messiasgeheimnis in der Evangelien''(1901), English translation, ''The Messianic Secret'', Cambridge: J. Clarke, 1971) have not
    29 KB (4,373 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • ...root of the word in [[English language|English]] and most other European [[language]]s comes from the [[Latin]] ''creatus'', literally "to have grown." ...ribe mathematical thought processes. In contrast to authors who identify [[language]] and [[cognition]], he describes his own mathematical thinking as largely
    55 KB (7,689 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • One of the first to use the term "totalitarianism" in the [[English]] language was the Austrian writer [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz_Borkenau Franz
    21 KB (3,000 words) - 02:41, 13 December 2020
  • ...The ultimate origin of the word is unknown; suggestions include [[Arabic language|Arabic]] ''[[Rho (letter)|ra'is]]'' meaning "head", but also "beginning" or ...teractions &mdash; for example, the hostility between the [[English people|English]] and [[Irish people|Irish]] was a powerful influence on early thinking abo
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  • ...dern times. The Greek term prophētēs is the etymological ancestor of the [[English]] word [[prophet]], and it has cognates in most European languages. The ind ...elieved to communicate their will through [[oracle]]s, that is, in human [[language]] through the mouth of an inspired person. The behavior of these divine spo
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  • ...welcome! Michael and I often use the word delight, for that is the closest English approximation to your effect on Us. You are a small beacon of spiritual lig ...d Her way. Her response will be mostly felt as emotional. This is more Her language that She shares with you, as She seeks to augment and intensify these trium
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  • ...e process. Fuller also introduced synergetics, a [[metaphor|metaphoric]] [[language]] for communicating experiences using geometric concepts, long before the t ...ries in the design of buildings, not based on conventional rectangles. The English writer, playwright, and philosopher John Dryden wrote something quite relev
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  • ...not knowing how to express [[morontia]] [[concepts]] in the [[English]] [[language]], it is a fitting back together of the pieces of your [[self]].
    34 KB (5,487 words) - 23:03, 12 December 2020
  • ...s, the ability of the revelators to express themselves through the English language, even as they testify to the challenge of conveying spirit concepts into th
    24 KB (4,386 words) - 12:13, 27 December 2010
  • Again, we're dealing with the English language; we're working with words that you give me to deal with. Let's go back to t
    29 KB (5,280 words) - 19:57, 15 March 2012
  • .... 275 As long as every word..is felt to express its own radical meaning, a language belongs to the first or radical stage. 1899 Amer. Jrnl. Semitic Langs. & Li ...ch of them by it selfe Peru. 1641 J. WILKINS Mercury xiii. 109 The Hebrew..language consists of fewest radicalls. 1677 R. PLOT Nat. Hist. Oxford-shire 284 He p
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  • ...'' by Martin Riccardo, the first comprehensive bibliography of [[English]]-language vampire [[literature]]. In 1994 he completed ''The Vampire Book: An Encyclo
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  • ...ing and the secrets of Creation in what they argued was the [[metaphor]]ic language of the verses. Due to the concern of some [[Torah]] scholars that misunder ...ex.htm Notes on the Study of Merkabah Mysticism and Hekhalot Literature in English]
    25 KB (4,052 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • ...ile searching for the right word, which word does not exist in the English language] . .. [[power]]. And as you also are operating within that pattern, you hav
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  • *Language: English
    27 KB (4,222 words) - 01:24, 13 December 2020
  • ...f inquiry or study." From the American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 20
    28 KB (4,068 words) - 02:44, 13 December 2020
  • CHARLES: Good afternoon, this is Charles. I am really not all that English, you know, nor French. I am the executive figurehead of the Triumvirate of ...consultants, we do not quit, kids! We are there 24/7 for you, to use your language. (Laughter.)
    31 KB (5,308 words) - 21:53, 12 December 2020
  • [[British idealism]] enjoyed ascendancy in English-speaking philosophy in the later part of the 19th century. [[F. H. Bradley] ...e to think, but all forms in existence are unthinkable; thought depends on language, which merely abstracts from experience, thus separating us from lived expe
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  • ...tments that these [[revelations]] were [[materialized]] in the [[English]] language on [[Urantia]].) Such [[potential]] [[contact]] [[mortals]] of the [https:/
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  • ...There are many names for “lion,” but they mean the same thing, and so, you English speakers think of “lion” as lion, and you think that is the way it shou
    32 KB (5,576 words) - 18:48, 25 February 2017
  • [[Henry Watson Fowler]], in ''The King's English'', says “any definition of irony—though hundreds might be given, and ve ...speakers. Regardless of the various ways theorists categorize figurative [[language]] types, people in conversation are attempting to decode speaker intentions
    24 KB (3,775 words) - 01:23, 13 December 2020
  • ...tments that these [[revelations]] were [[materialized]] in the [[English]] language on [[Urantia]].) Such [[potential]] [[contact]] [[mortals]] of the [https:/
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  • ...servations about the general misbehavior of so-called spiritualists in the English speaking but that is not a person but a title. M A Oxon is really an insider’s language to indicate an education
    47 KB (8,269 words) - 20:16, 26 March 2013
  • ...f inquiry or study." From the American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
    30 KB (4,320 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...hich are many times undecipherable in terms of your English or other human language.
    51 KB (8,812 words) - 21:57, 12 December 2020
  • ...w months". From our [[frame of reference]] in the use of the [[English]] [[language]], that would seem closer than the end of April. Could you clarify what he
    52 KB (8,887 words) - 23:03, 12 December 2020
  • ...iated with mood, [[temperament]], [[personality]], and disposition. The [[English]] [[word]] 'emotion' is derived from the French word ''émouvoir''. This is ...search in this area focuses on physical displays of emotion including body language of animals and humans (see affect display). The increased potential in neur
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  • ...ank]], who, in 1924, published '' Das Trauma der Geburt'' (translated into English in 1929 as ''The Trauma of Birth''), exploring how [[art]], [[myth]], [[rel ...ined by Freud's translators; Freud used the term, "''ich''" meaning "I" in English. Freud called the superego the "''Über-ich''". The id was designated as t
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  • ...Melchizedek]]. We indited these narratives and put them in the [[English]] language, by a technique authorized by our superiors, in the year [https://www.wikip
    50 KB (6,599 words) - 01:28, 13 December 2020
  • ...could identify that I could read. There are so many words in the English language that it does not seem possible to memorize them all without some way to dif
    35 KB (6,260 words) - 16:50, 2 June 2015
  • ...ed ’ēl can mean 'mighty', though such use may be metaphorical (compare the English expression God-awful). It is possible also that the expression ’ēlîm in ...ia, however, Dante contradicts this by saying that God was called I in the language of Adam, and only named El in later Hebrew, but before the confusion of ton
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  • ...and sacraments, so that by using the holy names of [[God]] in the sacred [[language]]s, he could use [[divine]] [[power]] to coerce [[demon]]s into appearing a ...most commonly associated with the resurgence of magical tradition in the [[English]] speaking world of the 20th century. Other, similar [[movements]] took pla
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  • ...d to be meaningful, then we should see just what meaning attaches to it in English usage. ...dingly review the meanings which are attached to the usage of this noun in English:
    111 KB (17,164 words) - 18:25, 17 November 2009
  • ...''ki'' in Japanese), kuch-ha-guf. (Hebrew), bios (Greek) & aether (Greek, English), which is thought to flow among them along pathways called nadis. The func *The Twilight Language: Explorations in Buddhist Meditation and Symbolism, ISBN 0-312-82540-4
    29 KB (4,482 words) - 23:42, 12 December 2020
  • ...definition of a term sometimes differs substantially from their [[natural language]] usage. For example, [[mass]] and [[weight]] overlap in meaning in common ...eories that are "[[elegant]]" or "[[beautiful]]". In contrast to the usual English use of these terms, they here refer to a theory in accordance with the know
    54 KB (7,840 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...zedek]]. We indited these [[narratives]] and put them in the [[English]] [[language]], by a [[technique]] authorized by our superiors, in the year [https://en.
    55 KB (7,995 words) - 01:40, 13 December 2020
  • ...it means it will have a useful search bar for those who are of the English language, and it will have a translator aspect that will translate into various lang
    39 KB (7,100 words) - 12:28, 2 December 2019
  • ...] and elsewhere. Others know me by other names, but you in the [[English]] language know me as Rayson.
    44 KB (7,788 words) - 23:26, 12 December 2020
  • ...tween God and man. James also wrote a preface to the fourth edition of the English translation of Fechner's Little Book of Life after Death (1907), in which F ...ed between 1880 and 1910 as a driving force behind a larger French, Swiss, English, and American psychotherapeutic axis that dominated developments in scienti
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  • ...it describes wave functions that cannot be easily expressed in ordinary [[language]]. In double-slit experiments, [[photons]] are fired singly through a doubl *Albert Messiah, Quantum Mechanics, English translation by G. M. Temmer of Mécanique Quantique, 1966, John Wiley and S
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  • "Chew on it!," as it were. This is an [[expression]] I enjoy within your [[language]]. "Chew" on this guidance. Savor the flavor of this [[Truth]]! Does it not ===='''''[[Language]]''''', '''''[[Perfection]]'''''====
    99 KB (15,719 words) - 23:26, 12 December 2020
  • ...everal recent studies have shown that individuals who use overly elaborate language to convey simple ideas are often viewed as more unintelligent than their pe ...sopher-king. You'll get much less accomplished by forcing such complicated language into a comment that can be summed up into two or three sentences.
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  • ...We wish to proceed with our projects much in a compassionate, "corporate language," so to speak—no pun intended. (Laughter.) ...oblige, so to speak. This was the attitude of the French nobility and the English nobility, also in the Austro-Germanic principalities, that they knew that t
    40 KB (6,897 words) - 18:21, 1 January 2019
  • as thought to the symbols using the English alphabet. I do not hear the symbol transfer; ...9.1) 42:2.1]] It is indeed difficult to find suitable words in the English language whereby to
    71 KB (11,185 words) - 23:32, 12 December 2020
  • ...on system for sharing ideas under one fairly prevailing language, which is English, though the Chinese and Chinese dialects do dominate in sheer numbers. Thi
    42 KB (7,412 words) - 20:19, 3 August 2014
  • ...make it clear that they are not able to follow the definitions the English language gives to the words - power, energy, and force. (9,5) The Papers define thei
    60 KB (9,295 words) - 18:26, 17 November 2009
  • ...would like to ask a question, please. This is on two words in our English language and they are: “transition” and “transformation.” Would you, please
    42 KB (7,015 words) - 19:15, 16 August 2016
  • ...ns of [[force]], [[energy]], and [[power]]. There is such [[paucity]] of [[language]] that we must use these terms in multiple [[meanings]]. In this paper, for
    76 KB (10,184 words) - 01:23, 13 December 2020
  • ...to the languages of the most populated, democratic nations. That would be English, Spanish, French, German, Italian and so on. ...geneous social existence around the world, though you would still have the language barriers and cultural differences.
    46 KB (7,851 words) - 22:05, 12 December 2020
  • ...racies, one that has an integrated language structure based principally on English and that this is the beginning of a much more integrated social awareness p
    45 KB (7,880 words) - 19:03, 5 May 2014
  • ...he desecration of the [[American flag]] and the use of [[obscenity|obscene language]]. Two cases eventually went to the [[U.S. Supreme Court]]. The first case ...d of the Class]]'' featured a 2-part episode in 1990 where the head of the English department is determined to disrupt the school's performance of ''Hair''.<r
    35 KB (5,229 words) - 00:16, 13 December 2020
  • ...] of your [[society]], and your world [[experience]], in the [[English]] [[language]] [[cultures]], there is a paucity of information about [[spiritual]] [[exi
    59 KB (9,386 words) - 23:38, 12 December 2020
  • ...applicable to all populations. Obviously there are language limitations in English, which are overcome in other languages that also have their own inherent li
    62 KB (11,291 words) - 20:51, 27 December 2010
  • ...when you encounter someone that's from another country and doesn't speak [[English]]. You're more [[tolerant]] of their [[behavior]] and their (?) than you ar F: But in your language, why do you not express yourself more
    98 KB (16,890 words) - 23:28, 12 December 2020
  • ...6 May 9/6 Durrants Hotel in George Street, for years the home-from-home of English County families. 1961 M. BEADLE These Ruins are Inhabited (1963) xii. 165 T ...ire, venire domum); but as this construction is otherwise obsolete in the language, home so used is treated practically as an adverb, and has developed purely
    61 KB (9,692 words) - 00:09, 13 December 2020

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