| 41. | Elisions likely occurred regularly in Latin, but were not written, except in inscriptions and comedy.
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| 42. | *Any other parts of a name that are clearly abbreviations or elisions are fully written out.
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| 43. | In these cases, words have undergone a seemingly systematic elision of final letters, or apocope.
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| 44. | In the end, such sweeping elisions of reality lie far beyond the ken of conventional political analysis.
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| 45. | Elision refused to detail the source of the threat or explain how the government knew it was credible.
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| 46. | However, these types of elisions are rarely shown in modern writing and never shown in formal writing.
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| 47. | According to the Real Academia Espa�ola, the expression or elision of the subject pronoun is not random.
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| 48. | This is a kind of external sandhi in which words join, undergoing phonological processes such as elision.
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| 49. | Despite his recent immersion in the tortured elisions of diplomacy, McCurry can be brusque, and sometimes temperamental.
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| 50. | The inflection of articles is complex, especially because of frequent elision, but is similar to neighboring languages.
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