- languages'
orthographies offer different degrees of
correspondence between spelling and pronunciation. English, French, Danish, and Thai
orthographies, for...
-
based on its spelling:
shallow orthographies are easy to
pronounce based on the
written word, and deep
orthographies are
difficult to
pronounce based...
-
rarely have
perfectly phonemic orthographies; a high
degree of grapheme–phoneme
correspondence can be
expected in
orthographies based on
alphabetic writing...
-
Orthographic reform Orthographic transcription Orthographic variant Orthographic depth Orthographic Latinisation Orthographic projection Orthographic...
-
different spelling orthographies were
developed in the
Dutch East
Indies and
British Malaya respectively,
influenced by the
orthographies of
their respective...
- ways in the two
orthographies. This is
probably the most
commonly encountered difference between the word
divisions of the two
orthographies Dikgomo di a...
-
Orthographic projection (also
orthogonal projection and analemma) is a
means of
representing three-dimensional
objects in two dimensions. Orthographic...
-
standardised orthographies, one used on the
island of
Aruba and the
other on the
islands of Curaçao and Bonaire. The
Aruban orthography is more etymological...
-
dyslexia in a
shallow orthography is a
comparatively slow
speed of
rapid automatized naming. For
languages with
relatively deep
orthographies, such as English...
- English's
orthography includes norms for spelling, hyphenation, capitalisation, word breaks, emphasis, and punctuation. As with the
orthographies of most...