- sono 'I am', from
Latin sum, is an example. Sometimes, as above, the
paragogic vowel is an echo vowel, such as Proto-Oceanic *saqat "bad" >
Uneapa zaɣata...
- In
Hebrew morphology, the
paragogic nun (from
paragoge 'addition at the end of a word') is a nun
letter (נ)
added at the end of
certain verb forms, without...
- of plasticity.[clarification needed] Use of epic
names to
characterize the individuals. Use of the
paragogic e.
Mester de Juglaría
Mester de Clerecía...
-
around the
world (including
English loanwords in ****anese), is to add a
paragogic dummy vowel, as if the
syllable coda were a
second syllable: ha-fu for...
-
other symbols. An echo vowel, also
known as a
synharmonic vowel, is a
paragogic vowel that
repeats the
final vowel in a word in speech. For example, in...
-
conjectured that the
imperfect can
express modal quality through the
paragogic nun
added to
certain imperfect forms.
While often ****ure tense, it also...
- a
short vowel), mies+ta → miestä (consonant stem), jousi+ta →
jousta (
paragogic i on a
consonant stem).
Elision of
unstressed vowels (usually /ə/) is...
- in consonants. Even if the word, such as a
personal name, is native, a
paragogic vowel is
needed to
connect a
consonantal case
ending to the word. The...
- the same for
suffixes in -/àna/, -/ànna/, -/énna/, -/ònna/ + /r/ + a
paragogic vowel (such as the
toponym Bunnànnaru). Rohlfs,
Butler and
Craddock add...
-
orthographic sign of a
nasal sound.
Other consonants typically receive a
paragogic -e in loanwords.
Barranquenho a
transitional Spanish–Portuguese dialect...