- qo-u-ko-ro /gʷou̯kolos/) "cowherd",
ultimately from PIE *gʷou-kolos,
dissimilated from *gʷou-kʷolos. If the
labiovelar had not
undergone dissimilation...
-
doubled (Mariamme). In
later copies of
those editions the
spelling was
dissimilated to its now most
common form, Mariamne. In Hebrew,
Mariamne is
known as...
- a way that is not
easily remedied through re-wording, the
forms may
dissimilate. For example, in
modern Korean the
vowels /e/ and /ɛ/ are
merging for...
-
observed in
Cypriot Arabic include:
Historical stop + stop
clusters are
dissimilated to
fricative + stop. /k x/ are
palatalized to [c ç]
before /i e j/. /j/...
- or
Middle Juz). They
originate from
eastern Kazakhstan. Some
Naimans dissimilated with the
Kyrgyz and
Uzbek ethnicities and are
still found among them...
-
finally Liberec (1845). In Czech,
words starting with "R" were
often dissimilated into "L".
Since then, the city was
known as
Liberec in
Czech and as Reichenberg...
-
showed that
laterals /l/ or /ɫ/ or the
nasal consonant /n/
would be
dissimilated into
either /n/ in the case of /l/ or /ɫ/; or /l/ or /ɫ/ in the case...
-
vowels sporadically ****imilate to or
dissimilate from the
stressed vowel of the
following syllable. /a/ can
dissimilate to /o/
before a
following /a/. Cf...
-
development known as Geers's law,
where one of two
emphatic consonants dissimilates to the
corresponding non-emphatic consonant. For the sibilants, traditionally...
- list
written in the 1930s; here
Tolkien provides the word
hadhathang (
dissimilated: havathang, hadhafang),
which he
translates as "throng-cleaver", though...