- Look up
tmesis in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. In its
strictest sense,
tmesis (/ˈtmiːsɪs, təˈmiː-/;
plural tmeses /ˈtmiːsiːs, təˈmiː-/;
Ancient Gr****:...
- for intensification. It is
similar to
tmesis, but not all
instances are
covered by the
usual definition of
tmesis because the
words are not necessarily...
- use of **** or more
specifically ****ing as an infix, or more properly, a
tmesis (see
expletive infixation). For example, the word in-****ing-credible sounds...
- and are unclear. For example, in the
Rigveda preverbs regularly occur in
tmesis,
states Jamison,
which means they are "separated from the
finite verb"....
-
Archived from the
original on 12 July 2010.
Retrieved 3
August 2010. "
Tmesis Theatre Company –
Physical Fest '05". Tmesistheatre.com.
Archived from the...
- PMID 12517561.
Walker SJ,
Johnson RH (1989). "Traumatic hemisomato-
tmesis: a case
report and
review of the literature". Arch
Emerg Med. 6 (1): 66–9...
-
technical terminology,
these examples are
often more
accurately described as
tmesis. None of the
following are
recognized in
standard English. The
infix ⟨-iz-⟩...
- determinant, and
occasionally between the
elements of a
compound word (
tmesis). Kennings, and even
whole clauses, can be interwoven.
Ambiguity is usually...
-
Neurotmesis (in Gr****
tmesis signifies "to cut") is part of Seddon's
classification scheme used to
classify nerve damage. It is the most
serious nerve...
-
Appears after the stem, but is only
partially bound to it
Infix (see also
tmesis) edu⟨ma⟩cated st⟨infix⟩em
Appears within a stem —
common e.g. in Austronesian...