The bell's spectrum, though on C, contains F harmonic series partials, "'to curiously thrilling and disturbing effect .'" " Such'unanalyzable'secondary strike notes are quite common in bells ."
12.
There are no unanalyzable root words for color; the recorded color words are all compounds like " mii sai " or " bii sai, " " blood-like, " which is not that uncommon.
13.
Unanalyzable stems consist of a longer sequence of phonemes than roots, such as CVC, or CVCV . Some of these unanalyzable stems are borrowed from Spanish, such as " p�aal? ",'to visit, a visit '.
14.
Unanalyzable stems consist of a longer sequence of phonemes than roots, such as CVC, or CVCV . Some of these unanalyzable stems are borrowed from Spanish, such as " p�aal? ",'to visit, a visit '.
15.
For example, Fodor considers such concepts as EFFECT, ISLAND, TRAPEZOID, and WEEK to be all primitive, innate and unanalyzable because they all fall into the category of what he calls " lexical concepts " ( those for which our language has a single word ).
16.
For example, Fodor considers such concepts as BACHELOR, EFFECT, ISLAND, TRAPEZOID, VIXEN, and WEEK to be all primitive, innate and unanalyzable because they all fall into the category of what he calls " lexical concepts " ( those for which our language has a single word ).
17.
The difference between common stems and unanalyzable stems is that commons stems can include an additional single position class of instrumental prefixes with the shape CV ( ?)-, and / or a member of one or both of two position classes of manner suffixes, with the shape-C,-CC, or.
18.
It renders many facts " absolutely inexplicable, unless to say that'God makes them so'is to be regarded as an explanation " when, instead, philosophy should avoid being " unidealistic ", misbelieving that something real can defy or evade all possible ideas, and supposing, inevitably, " some absolutely inexplicable, unanalyzable ultimate ", which explanatory surmise explains nothing and so is inadmissible.
19.
The distinction can be illustrated thus : In their ordinary uses, the name " Charles Philip Arthur George Mountbatten-Windsor ", which for logical purposes is an unanalyzable whole, and the functional expression " the Prince of Wales ", which contains the significant parts " the prince of ? " and " Wales ", have the same " reference ", namely, the person best known as Prince Charles.