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"svarabhakti" Definitions
  1. the introduction of a vowel sound in Sanskrit especially between r or l and a following consonant
  2. of, relating to, or used in svarabhakti
"svarabhakti" Synonyms
"svarabhakti" Antonyms

4 Sentences With "svarabhakti"

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

The form Birger has been revived from the old language within the last 200 years. This "revived" form has accent 1, like an a‑stem with a nominative suffix consisting of the svarabhakti‐vowel ‑e‑ plus ‑r. Swedish names revived during romanticism commonly take a historically unjustified pronunciation.
In phonology, epenthesis (; Greek ) means the addition of one or more sounds to a word, especially to the interior of a word (at the beginning prothesis and at the end paragoge are commonly used). The word epenthesis comes from "in addition to" and en "in" and thesis "putting". Epenthesis may be divided into two types: excrescence, for the addition of a consonant, and svarabhakti, or anaptyxis (), for the addition of a vowel. The opposite process, where one or more sounds are removed, is referred to as elision.
Oslo 1973. Ija‑stems ended in ‑ir i Old Swedish, which regularly developed into a word final ‑e in modern Swedish. This explains why Börje has accent 2 today: since the synkope at the transition from Proto-norse to Norse the name has been disyllabic, which leads to a word being pronounced with the grave accent in modern Swedish. Hence, the vowel in the second syllable of old Swedish Birghir or Birgher was no svarabhakti vowel like the ‑e‑ in modern Swedish words such as the a‑stem dager, which at one stage was monosyllabic (dagr) and therefore has accent 1.
The sound system of Kusaal is similar to that of its relatives; consonant clusters (except between adjacent words) occur only word-internally at morpheme-junctures, and are determined by the limited range of consonants which can appear in syllable-final position. Clusters arising from the addition of suffixes in derivation and flexion are either simplified or broken up by inserted ("svarabhakti") vowels. The roster of consonants includes the widespread West African labiovelar double-closure stops kp, gb, but the palatal series of the related languages (written ch/j in Dagbani and Hanga and ky/gy in Mampruli) fall in with the simple velars, as in neighbouring Farefare (Frafra, Gurene) and Moore. The reflexes of the palatal and labiovelar double- closure nasals of the related languages, [n] written ny and [ŋm] ŋm - are probably best analysed as a nasalised y and w respectively, but the scope of the nasalisation and the order of its onset with respect to the semivowel is variable.

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