Results 271 to 280 of about 58,433 (316)
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2020
This chapter presents the Latin-based alphabet of Turkish, which differs from that of English in the extra letters ç, ğ, ı, ö, ş, and ü, whereas it lacks q, w, and x. A detailed account is given of vowels, of consonants not present in the English alphabet, and of consonants shared by both languages. The notions front and back for vowels are introduced,
Saeed Yousef, Hayedeh Torabi
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This chapter presents the Latin-based alphabet of Turkish, which differs from that of English in the extra letters ç, ğ, ı, ö, ş, and ü, whereas it lacks q, w, and x. A detailed account is given of vowels, of consonants not present in the English alphabet, and of consonants shared by both languages. The notions front and back for vowels are introduced,
Saeed Yousef, Hayedeh Torabi
openaire +2 more sources
Is Korean a syllabic alphabet or an alphabetic syllabary
Writing Systems Research, 2011This article supplies a critical overview of Korean with respect to writing system, orthography, phonology, and morphology as well as the role of vowels for the purpose of clarifying inconsistently used terms in the literature. An inaccurate terminology may plague interpretations and conclusions drawn from research studies. The Korean writing system is
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Dyslexia in alphabetic and non-alphabetic scripts
2010Conference Theme: Dyslexia: "At the Dawn of the New Century"
Smythe, I +5 more
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Young children's alphabet learning as a function of instruction and letter difficulty
Learning and Individual Differences, 2022Shayne B Piasta, Somin Park
exaly
2017
This chapter takes the Turkish Republican decision in 1928 to replace its official Arabic script with Latin script—the Alphabet Revolution—as a second case study in nonhuman biopolitical nostalgia. Comparing Turkey’s demolition of its alphabet to similar twentieth-century moments in other modernist states, and contextualizing this history within a ...
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This chapter takes the Turkish Republican decision in 1928 to replace its official Arabic script with Latin script—the Alphabet Revolution—as a second case study in nonhuman biopolitical nostalgia. Comparing Turkey’s demolition of its alphabet to similar twentieth-century moments in other modernist states, and contextualizing this history within a ...
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Practical Evaluation of Lyndon Factors via Alphabet Reordering
Mathematics, 2023Marcelo Keese Albertini, Felipe A Louza
exaly
Alphabet of the Sunflower, and: Alphabet of Sails, and: Alphabet of Naught
Colorado Review, 2011openaire +1 more source

