English-Wörter für 'The quality of being a language.'
Oben finden Sie Wörter zu "The quality of being a language.". Bewegen Sie den Fokus oder Mauszeiger auf ein Wort, um die Definition anzuzeigen.
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- The language of a people or a national language.
- Language unique to a particular group of people.
- A language lacking standardization or a written form.
- (architecture) A style of architecture involving local building materials and styles; not imported.
- Indigenous spoken language, as distinct from a literary or liturgical language such as Ecclesiastical Latin.
- Everyday speech or dialect, including colloquialisms, as opposed to standard, literary, liturgical, or scientific idiom.
- the everyday speech of the people (as distinguished from literary language)
- a characteristic language of a particular group (as among thieves)
- Belonging to the country of one's birth; one's own by birth or by nature.
- (art) Connected to a collective memory; not imported.
- (architecture) Of or related to local building materials and styles; not imported.
- Of or pertaining to everyday language, as opposed to standard, literary, liturgical, or scientific idiom.
- (taxonomy) Not attempting to use the rules of a taxonomic code, especially, not using scientific Latin.
- being or characteristic of or appropriate to everyday language
- (uncountable, cooking) A style of cuisine or individual dishes of or associated with Italy or Italian people.
- (uncountable) Ellipsis of Italian vermouth, a dark-colored sweet or mildly bitter vermouth.
- (countable, textiles) Ellipsis of Italian cloth.
- (uncountable) The official language of Italy, also spoken in San Marino, the Vatican, and parts of Argentina, Slovenia and Switzerland; various varieties (dialects) exist.
- (countable, Maine) Ellipsis of Italian sandwich.
- (countable) An inhabitant of Italy or a person of Italian descent.
- Ellipsis of Italian bread.
- a native or inhabitant of Italy
- the Romance language spoken in Italy
- The vocabulary of a language.
- (programming) The lexicology of a programming language. (Usually called lexical structure.)
- A set of vocabulary specific to a certain subject.
- A dictionary of Classical Greek, Hebrew, Latin, or Aramaic.
- A list thereof.
- (rare) Any dictionary.
- (lexicography, linguistics) A dictionary that includes or focuses on lexemes.
- The vocabulary used by or known to an individual. (Also called lexical knowledge.)
- a language user's knowledge of words
- a reference book containing an alphabetical list of words with information about them
- the study of language meaning
- the meaning of a word, phrase, sentence, or text
- (computer science) The meaning of computer language constructs, in contrast to their form or syntax.
- (loosely, colloquial, of a detail or distinction) Pettiness or triviality.
- The study of the relationship between words and their meanings.
- The meaning or set of meanings of a linguistic element, such as a word, morpheme or utterance.
- (linguistics) A branch of linguistics studying the meaning of words.
- The meanings of individual words, as opposed to the overall meaning of a passage.
- (historical) Any of a group of people who once lived around modern Jordan.
- The ancient inhabitants of Nabataea, a region of Arabia inhabited by the Nabataeans that covers parts of northern Arabia and the Southern Levant, lying between Arabia and Syria, and stretching from the Euphrates river to the Red Sea. During the Hellenistic Period, the Nabataeans were involved in a nexus of trade routes reaching as far as Italy to the west and India to the east, which centered at their city of Petra in what is now Western Jordan near the Negev Desert from before 310 BCE until the Roman conquest in 106 CE.
- (linguistics) A substrate.
- A layer that lies underneath another.
- (figuratively) The underlying cause or basis of something.
- a surface on which an organism grows or is attached
- any stratum or layer lying underneath another
- an indigenous language that contributes features to the language of an invading people who impose their language on the indigenous population
- The language of these people.
- The Santee branch of the Sioux people.
- A unisex given name transferred from the place name.
- Either of the two states North Dakota or South Dakota.
- (historical) The Dakota Territory; an organized incorporated territory of the United States that existed from March 2, 1861, until November 2, 1889, when the final extent of the reduced territory was split and admitted to the Union as the states of North Dakota and South Dakota.
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- The language of a people or a national language.
- Language unique to a particular group of people.
- A language lacking standardization or a written form.
- (architecture) A style of architecture involving local building materials and styles; not imported.
- Indigenous spoken language, as distinct from a literary or liturgical language such as Ecclesiastical Latin.
- Everyday speech or dialect, including colloquialisms, as opposed to standard, literary, liturgical, or scientific idiom.
- the everyday speech of the people (as distinguished from literary language)
- a characteristic language of a particular group (as among thieves)
- Belonging to the country of one's birth; one's own by birth or by nature.
- (art) Connected to a collective memory; not imported.
- (architecture) Of or related to local building materials and styles; not imported.
- Of or pertaining to everyday language, as opposed to standard, literary, liturgical, or scientific idiom.
- (taxonomy) Not attempting to use the rules of a taxonomic code, especially, not using scientific Latin.
- being or characteristic of or appropriate to everyday language
- The vocabulary of a language.
- (programming) The lexicology of a programming language. (Usually called lexical structure.)
- A set of vocabulary specific to a certain subject.
- A dictionary of Classical Greek, Hebrew, Latin, or Aramaic.
- A list thereof.
- (rare) Any dictionary.
- (lexicography, linguistics) A dictionary that includes or focuses on lexemes.
- The vocabulary used by or known to an individual. (Also called lexical knowledge.)
- a language user's knowledge of words
- a reference book containing an alphabetical list of words with information about them
- the study of language meaning
- the meaning of a word, phrase, sentence, or text
- (computer science) The meaning of computer language constructs, in contrast to their form or syntax.
- (loosely, colloquial, of a detail or distinction) Pettiness or triviality.
- The study of the relationship between words and their meanings.
- The meaning or set of meanings of a linguistic element, such as a word, morpheme or utterance.
- (linguistics) A branch of linguistics studying the meaning of words.
- The meanings of individual words, as opposed to the overall meaning of a passage.
- (linguistics) A substrate.
- A layer that lies underneath another.
- (figuratively) The underlying cause or basis of something.
- a surface on which an organism grows or is attached
- any stratum or layer lying underneath another
- an indigenous language that contributes features to the language of an invading people who impose their language on the indigenous population
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Keine passenden Wörter gefunden. Versuchen Sie eine allgemeinere Beschreibung.
- (uncountable, cooking) A style of cuisine or individual dishes of or associated with Italy or Italian people.
- (uncountable) Ellipsis of Italian vermouth, a dark-colored sweet or mildly bitter vermouth.
- (countable, textiles) Ellipsis of Italian cloth.
- (uncountable) The official language of Italy, also spoken in San Marino, the Vatican, and parts of Argentina, Slovenia and Switzerland; various varieties (dialects) exist.
- (countable, Maine) Ellipsis of Italian sandwich.
- (countable) An inhabitant of Italy or a person of Italian descent.
- Ellipsis of Italian bread.
- a native or inhabitant of Italy
- the Romance language spoken in Italy