-
Haplology (from Gr**** ἁπλόος haplóos "simple" and λόγος lógos, "speech") is, in
spoken language, the
elision (elimination or deletion) of an
entire syllable...
- A
unique exception is the
reptile clade Dracohors,
which was made by
haplology from
Latin "draco" and "cohors", i.e. "the
dragon cohort"; its form with...
-
Linguists sometimes jokingly refer to
haplology as
haplogy (subjecting the word
haplology to the
process of
haplology itself). Per metonymy,
words ending...
-
feature affecting clarity in
seeing a
scientific word's
components is
haplology, i.e.
removing one of two
identical or
similar syllables that meet at...
- all ****imilations, but
medial sequences do not ****imilate the same way.
Haplology: The loss of a
syllable when an
adjacent syllable is
similar or (rarely)...
- money, made to
officials on
public missions;
mostly simply, the word, a
haplology of viā tē**** ("with you on the way"),
indicates money or
necessities for...
-
should be
written twice is
written once. It is not to be
confused with
haplology,
where a
phoneme is
omitted to
prevent two
similar sounds from occurring...
-
should theoretically be
called a "mo****mial". "Monomial" is a
syncope by
haplology of "mo****mial". With
either definition, the set of
monomials is a subset...
-
Angles (called
Angulus by Bede). The name
Engla land
became England by
haplology during the
Middle English period (Engle-land, Engelond). The
Latin name...
- /ɡənə/ or,
before a vowel, /ɡənu/
English library pronounced as /laɪbri/ (
haplology) In
historical phonology, the term "syncope" is
often limited to the loss...