substrate theories造句
例句與造句
- Substrate theories are often difficult to prove ( especially in the case of phonetically plausible changes like / f / to / h / ).
- Where a word originally began with in Latin, such as " festa "'party / feast', this sound was weakened to aspirated and then, in some areas, lost altogether; according to the substrate theory, this is due to the Basque dialects'lack of an equivalent phoneme.
- The non-Indo-European substrate theory was first proposed by Sigmund Feist in 1932, who estimated that roughly a third of Proto-Germanic lexical items came from a non-Indo-European substrate and that the supposed reduction of the Proto-Germanic inflectional system was the result of pidginization with that substrate.
- Although some linguists deny the plausibility of the Basque substrate theory, it is widely assumed that Basque, the " Circumpyrenean " language ( as put by Basque linguist Alfonso Irigoyen and defended by Koldo Mitxelena, 1982 ), is the underlying language spreading around the Pyrenees onto the banks of the Garonne River, maybe as far east as the Mediterranean in Roman times ( " niska " cited by Joan Coromines as the name of each nymph taking care of the Roman spa " Arles de Tech " in Roussillon, etc . ).
- It's difficult to find substrate theories in a sentence. 用substrate theories造句挺難的