song of the wind song renzong song taew song without words song xia xi yi ji song yang yin hou song-fu liu song-hu liu song-jiang dou song-jie zhao song-ling fu song-min li song-shan chen song-xian liu song the farmer in th songfest songgok college songgwang-sa songhua river son...
so he that goeth in t so heres my observati so hip so human so i can hold you hol so i can watch you cr so i cant let just th so i could not drink so i decide leave so i do so i figure we follow so i hum along out of so i kind of so i lit a fire so i m assuming...
Learners of French might be familiar with the “verlan,” a playful slang popular among youth, where syllables of common words are switched around. Rioplatense Spanish shares this feature in a slang form calledvesre. If you look closely at that word, you’ll see it is formed by switching t...
2 In other words, the double problem emerges of how to deal with the uncountable variety of historical circumstances and processes hidden beneath the apparently flat surface of the concept ‘convict labour’; and how to fully acknowledge that prisoners performed their work in very diverse, yet con...
This complementizer, which shares much in common with the recomplementation that (cf. (1)b), as we shall see, is associated with the subjunctive mood. Note that in all the cases in (1), the different occurrences of that can in principle be silent for most speakers without obvious ...
While the initial part of split interrogatives is independent (12), that of inferential interrogatives with qué cannot stand on its own, as seen in the ungrammaticality of (13).3 (12) Split questions a. ¿A quién saludaste? to who greeted:2SG 'Who did you greet?' (13) ...
That said, your cough might be different. It might be dry and called “unproductive,” meaning with no mucus. Or it might be wetter, producing mucus whenever you cough. You might cough so much, it hurts. You might not. Another reason why this virus can be so difficult to pin down....
This phrase originated from a modification of the words java or jamoke. The use of Joe in phrases was common in the 1930s and appeared in various expressions, including “an ordinary Joe” and the reference to an enlisted man as “GI Joe” according toWorld Wide Words. And let...
So: The stems of (1a–c) co-appear with words in contexts like (2a–c), where inflection is not possible, as shown in (5a–c), but they never substitute words in the contexts of (3) (note that in (5d), impossible spell-outs are in parentheses). 5. a. pech-i-frío pecho-...
eywords: Eastern Andalusian SpanishK; geyemwoinradTtsiho: neE;aKpscertoeeynrswsneoonAnrtdansnsdt:tuaEdlduaeysleitiaetninronvnSeA;pstdaninudgiraasalhtute;isosginatehanmleSidnfpioaffaltneliooirsenwhn;;iccnegogsen;mrseoinseaatnirotcndh;eqcleoutnieossontn;ioadnnustr:adteiolentaiolnd; iffduere...