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CORNISH LANGUAGE". CelticLife International. Retrieved 8 March 2018. Parry, John (1946). "The Revival of Cornish: An Dasserghyans Kernewek". PMLA. Modern Language... |
Machine from gov.ns.ca. "Language by State – Scottish Gaelic" Archived 2012-01-11 at the Wayback Machine on Modern Language Association website. Retrieved 27... |
British Association for Applied Linguistics (BAAL) 2014 Book Prize for Translingual Practice: Global Englishes and Cosmopolitan Relations Modern Language Association... |
Marie-Claude Simeone-Simelle. 1997. The Modern South Arabian Languages. In Robert Hetzron (ed.), The Semitic Languages, 378–423. London & New York: Routledge... |
awarded by the Modern Language Association (2008) Distinguished Scholarship and Service Award, awarded by the American Association of Applied Linguistics... |
Voiced bilabial nasal (category Articles containing Arabic-language text) International Phonetic Association, 33 (2): 255, doi:10.1017/S0025100303001373, S2CID 232344066 Thompson, Laurence (1959), "Saigon phonemics", Language, 35 (3): 458–461... |
The British Association for Applied Linguistics (BAAL) is an academic society. Members are professional applied linguists, language teachers, and other... |
edited, printed, circulated, reprinted and collected. Archive Modern Language Association Citation style Archived 2008-07-20 at the Wayback Machine This... |
the Input Hypothesis", The Modern Language Journal, vol. 73, National Federation of Modern Language Teachers Associations, Wiley, pp. 440–464, JSTOR 326879... |
Solitude in Montaigne's Essays". The Bulletin of the Rocky Mountain Modern Language Association. 25 (3): 93–97. doi:10.2307/1346683. JSTOR 1346683. Essays Archived... |
Voiced alveolar lateral fricative (category Articles containing Kabardian-language text) looking at modern languages, they think that this is how it was pronounced in the ancient language.) Today, the letter is pronounced in Modern Standard... |
Voiceless bilabial plosive (category Articles containing Adyghe-language text) Alphabet is ⟨p⟩. The X-SAMPA symbol for this sound is ⟨p⟩. The English language has this sound, and it is the sound represented by "p" in pear and paper... |
Voiced alveolar fricative (category Articles containing Kabardian-language text) Europe", Language, 51 (2): 282–292, doi:10.2307/412855, JSTOR 412855 Okada, Hideo (1999), "Japanese", in International Phonetic Association (ed.), Handbook... |
Voiced velar plosive (category Articles containing Abkhaz-language text) International Phonetic Association, 36 (2): 255–264, doi:10.1017/S0025100306002659 Thompson, Laurence (1959), "Saigon phonemics", Language, 35 (3): 454–476... |
Voiceless velar plosive (category Articles containing Abkhaz-language text) Alphabet is ⟨k⟩. The X-SAMPA symbol for this sound is ⟨k⟩. The English language has this sound, and it is the sound represented by the "c" in care and... |
Voiced velar nasal (category Articles containing Aleut-language text) International Phonetic Association, 22 (1–2): 53–56, doi:10.1017/S0025100300004618, S2CID 249411809 Dum-Tragut, Jasmine (2009), Armenian: Modern Eastern Armenian... |
were first used, the Germanic languages were not yet split into their modern branches; there was only one unified language (called Proto-Germanic) with... |
Voiceless glottal fricative (category Articles with Portuguese-language sources (pt)) Phonetic Association, 20 (2): 37–41, doi:10.1017/S0025100300004266, S2CID 243640727 Thompson, Laurence (1959), "Saigon phonemics", Language, 35 (3): 454–476... |
Voiced bilabial plosive (category Articles containing Kabardian-language text) Alphabet is ⟨b⟩. The X-SAMPA symbol for this sound is ⟨b⟩. The English language has this sound, and it is the sound represented by "b" in bear and about... |
language names. First there was ISO 639-1. To list more languages, ISO 639-2 was made. Later versions include ISO 639-3 and ISO 639-5. Each language has... |