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glossic
glossic, a. and n. (ˈglɒsɪk) [f. Gr. γλῶσσα tongue, language + -ic.] Applied by A. J. Ellis to a phonetic system of spelling invented by him in which each letter or digraph represents the sound which it most commonly expresses in English. Usually absol. as n.1871 Ellis E.E. Pronunc. iii. p. v, For t...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Fragipan
Fragipan Degradation and Nodule Formation in Glossic Fragiudalfs of the Lower Mississippi River Valley. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J., 64:1713-1722 ().
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glossotype
glossotype (ˈglɒsəʊtaɪp) [f. glosso- + type.] One of the systems of phonetic symbols invented by A. J. Ellis (afterwards improved into glossic).1867 Ellis E.E. Pronunc. i. 13. 1871 [see glossic].
Oxford English Dictionary
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Romic
Romic, a. and n. (ˈrəʊmɪk) [f. Rom-an a. + -ic.] The distinctive epithet of a system of phonetic notation devised by Dr. H. Sweet.1877 Sweet Handbk. Phonetics 102 This system, which I call ‘Romic’ (because based on the original Roman values of the letters). Ibid. 202 Detailed comparison of Glossic a...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Georgina Frederica Jackson
Skeat recommended she record the locality of each word and to use Ellis's glossic symbols.
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Polish Soil Classification
under it are weekly developed genetic soil horizons which are not yet fulfilling all conditions of diagnostic horizons (like mollic, cambic, sideric, glossic WRB: Albic or Haplic or Stanic or Gleyic or Lamelic or Vertic Luvisol; ST: Typic or Arenic or Aquic or Oxyaquic or Mollic or Psammentic or Lamelic or Glossic
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isogloss
isogloss (ˈaɪsəʊglɒs) [a. G. isogloss (A. Bielenstein Die Grenzen des Lettischen Volksstammes (1892) 397, f. iso- + gloss n.1] In Linguistic Geography, the boundary of an area of local concentration or dominance of a significant feature (as of vocabulary or pronunciation). Also, a line plotted on a ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Pangloss
Pangloss (ˈpænglɒs) Name of the philosopher and tutor in Voltaire's Candide (1759) who believes that ‘all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds’, used allusively for one who is optimistic regardless of the circumstances. Also attrib. Hence ˈPanglossism, an unrealistically optimistic att...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Emergent literacies
The system of education that supports standardized, mono-glossic language fails to include bilingual students to an extent, and this can have lasting impacts
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diglossia
diglossia Philol. (daɪˈglɒsɪə) [mod.L., ad. F. diglossie, f. Gr. δίγλωσσος bilingual + -ia1.] (See quot. 1964.)1959 C. A. Ferguson in Word XV. 325 Diglossia. In many speech communities two or more varieties of the same language are used by some speakers under different conditions. Ibid., The term ‘d...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Soil horizon
subsurface horizons
Agric horizon
Albic horizon
Anhydric horizon
Argillic horizon
Calcic horizon
Cambic horizon
Duripan layer
Fragipan layer
Glossic
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exo-
exo-, prefix1 (ˈɛksəʊ; before two unstressed syllables ɛkˈsɒ) (before a vowel sometimes reduced to ex-), repr. Gr. ἔξω, without, in many compounds of modern formation, as ˌexarteˈritis, ˌexo-arteˈritis [see arteritis], Path., inflammation of the outer coat of an artery; exoatmosˈpheric a., occurring...
Oxford English Dictionary
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pronunciation
pronunciation (prəʊnʌnsɪˈeɪʃən) Also 6–8 -noun-, 7 -non-; 6 -cy-, -sy-, 6–7 -ti-; 5 -cion. [ad. L. prōnuntiātiōn-em, n. of action f. prōnuntiāre to pronounce. Cf. F. prononciation (pronunciation, 1281 in Hatz.-Darm.).] The action of pronouncing. 1. The pronouncing or uttering of a word or words; the...
Oxford English Dictionary
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