I've heard a few ways of describing such a fantastical beast, but i don't know which is correct Accent marks, or more properly, diacritics are not totally absent in english They are just devilishly uncommon And the few diacritics i am aware of typically appear in foreign borrowings, such as façade, borrowed from french, or saké, from japanese There is also the diaeresis or umlaut, which is used to indicate that the vowels in an apparent diphthong are to be pronounced separately, as. Winged words played an important role in the elaboration of some theories about oral traditions
Some translators have translated the phrase literally, others have reflected a perceived emotion, yet others ignored these words. I am confused about the pronunciation of the word "chartered" In my understanding, the word is built as Charter + ed or charte + red why in the word "chartered",. While i have heard in the past certain words like winged being pronounced as wingid rather than wingd, i thought it an archaic peculiarity of a small subset of words Yet today i have heard sir richardson pronounce stained in the same odd fashion, as steinid rather than the overwhelmingly more common steind.
If it is not essential that the term be a single word, then the intended meaning can be conveyed by something like 'so close to exact algorithms as to be indistinguishable from them for all practical purposes' What would be more interesting for the purposes of this site than just finding a substitute expression. The words whinge and whine have separate (albeit very similar) definitions in the oed, and they have distinct pronunciations Whinge seems completely restricted to brite I have never heard it Similar to talented are gifted, or winged as in a bird is a winged creature
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