In Southern varieties of Chinese, such as Cantonese and Minnan, some monosyllabic words are made of exclusively nasals, such as " no " and " five ".
32.
Many disyllabic nouns are produced by adding the suffix P [ " zi " ( original meaning : " child " ) to a monosyllabic word or morpheme.
33.
4 . " Keats relies heavily on monosyllabic words and consonantal sounds especially bilabial consonants along with an emphasis on long vowels to control the flow of the poem.
34.
:In English orthography, represents initially ( see Swedish alphabets, represents in monosyllabic words like " agn ", and between two syllables, " tegne ".
35.
They had the vague feeling that the monosyllabic word might be taken as offensive _ as it is when delivered with a curled lip _ and went out of their way not to offend.
36.
This ultimately resulted in some languages ( e . g ., modern English ) losing practically all vowels following the main stress and the consequent rise of a very large number of monosyllabic words.
37.
Shortly after Broadbent's experiments, Oxford undergraduates Gray and Wedderburn repeated his dichotic listening tasks, altered with monosyllabic words that could form meaningful phrases, except that the words were divided across ears.
38.
It was said Schlitzie had the cognizance of a three-year-old : he was unable to care fully for himself and could speak only in monosyllabic words and form a few simple phrases.
39.
Outside of these pairs, the main tendency for tone is that the acute accent appears in monosyllables ( since the grave accent cannot appear in monosyllabic words ) while the grave accent appears in polysyllabic words.
40.
Japan's spare-speaking designers Yohji Yamamoto and Rei Kawakubo each had one monosyllabic word for this Paris men's season, which they printed in large letters across the invitations to their respective shows.