| 31. | The geminate affricate " * cc " generally remains, often spelled.
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| 32. | This was similar to the geminate sound which had been represented as in Old English.
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| 33. | In addition, in Tadraq is usually geminate, but in Tudalt singleton may occur.
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| 34. | As the last two examples shows, the Hurrian geminates are also absent in Urartian.
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| 35. | Whether a non-plain consonant is geminated or long depends on the syllabic context.
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| 36. | The weakened grades of geminate consonants still counted as geminates for the purposes of syllabification.
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| 37. | The weakened grades of geminate consonants still counted as geminates for the purposes of syllabification.
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| 38. | Geminate consonants were written double; long vowels were usually not distinguished from short ones.
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| 39. | Cypriot Greek, the Modern Greek dialect of Cyprus, however, preserves geminate consonants.
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| 40. | Before the fricatives, coronal obstruents assimilate to a fricative, resulting in a geminate.
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