toneless उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- That is, if the preceding syllable ends on a high tone and the following syllable begins with a high tone ( because it is high or falling ), the intermediate toneless syllable has its pitch raised as well.
- The toneless pinyin phrase " Wu Li " in the title is most accurately rendered in Chinese characters, one Chinese translation of the word " physics " in the light of the book's subject matter.
- Please spit me the precise percentage of situations, in toneless text on the internet sans a world of context like who I am and how I think, that turn out not to be the way the " sound ".
- In the former the argument is loud and vindictive, with the nightingale condescendingly insulting the owl for having a toneless and depressing singing voice; the owl defends her voice as warning and correcting men, and in turns threatens the nightingale.
- Some authors therefore, instead of referring to high and low tones, prefer to write in terms of syllables which have a'high tone'( or simply a tone ) vs those which are'toneless '.
- The Irish Times gave it a less favourable review, calling it " an important work " but negatively comparing the " somewhat flat and toneless " prose to that of W . G . Sebald and calling it " less convincing artistically ".
- It has a low beat, a muffled bassline and a toneless sample, with vocals that drift in and out of the mix; the song sounds as if it's being played underwater, with hints of melody occasionally bubbling to the surface.
- From a theoretical point of view, however, it has been argued that Chichewa tones are best thought of not in terms of H and L, but in terms of H and ? that is to say, high-toned vs toneless syllables.
- Some words, such as " Lilongwe " ( the capital of Malawi ), are toneless and are pronounced with all the syllables on a low pitch ( like the word " station " in the English " police-station " ).
- Occasionally a verb which is otherwise low-toned will acquire a high tone in certain idiomatic usages, e . g . " ndapit?" I'm off ( said on parting ), from the normally toneless " pita " go.