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6 Sentences With "nasalizing"

How to use nasalizing in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "nasalizing" and check conjugation/comparative form for "nasalizing". Mastering all the usages of "nasalizing" from sentence examples published by news publications.

An before the labial consonants , and tends towards , as in granpa (). An before the velar consonants and (and their allophones) tends towards , slightly nasalizing a preceding vowel, as in kenki ().
Both long and short vowels can be nasalized (the distinction between acces and ącces below), but long nasal vowels are more common. Nasal vowels usually appear as a result of a contraction, as the result of a neighboring nasal consonant, or as the result of nasalizing grade, a grammatical ablaut, which indicates intensification through lengthening and nasalization of a vowel (likoth- 'warm' with the nasalizing grade intensifies the word to likŏ:nth-os-i: 'nice and warm').Martin, 2011, pp. 53–54, 95 Nasal vowels may also appear as part of a suffix that indicates a question (o:sk- ihá:n 'I wonder if it's raining').
Nasality spreads rightward from the nasal vowel, nasalizing all oral vowels within a word if they are not nasal and all intervening consonants can be nasalized () : bu-bI-ko : : : 'She recently studied.' Unlike the previous example, in the next one, nasality spreads from the initial vowel to the following one, but it is blocked from the third syllable by a non-nasalizable : : dĩ-bI-ko : : : 'She recently went.' Nasal spreading is blocked by underlyingly oral suffixes or vowels that are underlyingly oral in a nasal/oral morpheme.
Choctaw nouns can be followed by various determiner and case-marking suffixes, as in the following examples, where we see determiners such as /-ma/ 'that', /-pa/ 'this', and /-akoo/ 'contrast' and case-markers /-(y)at/ 'nominative' and /-(y)a̱/ 'accusative':Broadwell (2006:64-92) :alla' naknimat :alla' nakni-m-at :child male-that- :'that boy (nominative)' :Hoshiit itti chaahamako̱ o̱biniilih. :Hoshi'-at itti' chaaha-m-ako̱ o̱-biniili-h :bird- tree tall-that- -sit- :'The bird is sitting on that tall tree.' (Not on the short one.) The last example shows that nasalizing the last vowel of the preceding N is a common way to show the accusative case.
Seneca nominal morphology is far simpler than verbal morphology. Nouns consist of a noun root followed by a noun suffix and a pronominal prefix. The noun suffix appears as either a simple noun suffix (denoting, naturally, that it is a noun), an external locative suffix, denoting that something is "on" or "at" that noun, or an internal locative suffix, denoting that something is "in" that noun. The forms of these are as follows: \- Simple noun suffix: -aʼ ~ -öʼ (in a nasalizing context) \- External locative suffix: -aʼgeh \- Internal locative suffix: -aʼgöh Nouns are often preceded by pronominal prefixes, but in this context, they represent possession, as opposed to agency or reception.
Reviewing L.A. Reggae in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981), Robert Christgau said, "there are modernization moves, of course—two get-out-the-vote songs (just what George needs) plus the mysterious reggae conceit plus a heartfelt if belated antiwar song—but basically this is just Johnny nasalizing on some fine old memories. 'Rockin' Pneumonia' and 'Knock on Wood' are especially fine." Other Hot 100 top 40 hits from that time period were 1973's "Blue Suede Shoes" (originally recorded in 1955 by Carl Perkins) and 1975's "Help Me Rhonda" (originally a #1 hit for the Beach Boys), on which Brian Wilson sang back-up vocals. Rivers' last Top 10 entry was his 1977 recording of "Swayin' to the Music (Slow Dancing)," written by Jack Tempchin and originally released by Funky Kings.

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