Home
Read Text
Games
Words Everyday
Hmong to English Dictionary
Favorite Words
Word Search History
Blogs
Contact
Topic Wise Words
Animals
Body
Business
Clothes
Crime
Culture
More...
Education
Family
Food
Health
House
Language
Leisure
Media
Nature
Personality
Religion Politics
Retail
Science
Social
Technology
Travel
War
Work
Hide...
Topic Language:: PAGE #2
← Previous
Next→
31. Alliteration (alliteration)
:: Strange is masterful in her ability to capture and juxtapose the audible qualities of language alongside the literary tools of assonance and alliteration
32. Article (tsab xov xwm)
:: Unlike stories written for newspapers and magazines articles on the Web stick around much longer
33. Articulate (articulate)
:: Yet we often fail to articulate this doctrine clearly even to ourselves
34. Bilabial (bilabial)
:: At the same time the pattern of variation in low frequency words suggests that a contactinduced change is underway where bilabials are favored when the English cognate of a Spanish word has a bilabial
35. Binomial (binomial)
:: The original title of Proteus now changed because Miramax is doing a submarine story with the same title involves the naming of the Protea flower in 1735 when it was given its correct Latin binomial
36. Collocation (collocation)
:: Johnson gave little attention to collocation idiom and grammatical information although he provided a brief grammar at the front
37. Colloquialism (colloquialism)
:: The illustrations were augmented and the entry and definition coverage expanded to include Americanisms slang and colloquialisms
38. Colon (nyuv)
:: I have been finding too many contradictory sources on the use of colons versus semicolons and now can remember neither quite right
39. Continuant (continuant)
:: He aptly describes the physical objects we seem to ourselves and take ourselves to perceive as visuotactual continuants
40. Continuous (nruam)
:: A point on the block serves as guide for the repeat impression so that the design is continuous
41. Declension (declension)
:: There are five declensional types in Latin that are recognized by their terminations in genitive singular
42. Diphthong (diphthong)
:: For example there is no attempt to distinguish between the pure O of Italian and the diphthongal O of British English or between the various R sounds of English French Spanish and German
43. Ellipsis (ellipsis)
:: it is very rare for an ellipsis to occur without a linguistic antecedent
44. Expression (qhia)
:: Jade nodded with a contemplative expression and led him down to the lower floors
45. German (german)
::
46. Gerund (gerund)
:: He also advises that one should use the active instead of the passive voice and gerunds instead of noun constructions
47. Inflection (inflection)
:: In such services both the minister and the congregation routinely use voice rhythm and vocal inflection to convey meaning
48. Javanese (Javanese)
::
49. Oxymoron (oxymoron)
:: I have no desire to drive those two oxymorons classic rock and young country from the air
50. Prefix (prefix)
:: Sinclair has painted some 80 large works in oil on board each of which say either I love Real Life or use the real life title prefixed by the name of the appropriate colour in which Sinclair has covered the ground
51. Preposition (preposition)
:: Its quite different from English too in that it puts the verb at the end of the sentence and uses postpositions instead of prepositions
52. Present (tam sim no)
:: to present theories as facts
53. Rhetorical (rhetorical)
:: In the second phase it will be necessary to be practical as well as rhetorical to persuade as well as instruct
54. Syllabic (syllabic)
:: We may label this prosodic feature syllabicity with in our reconstructions
55. Syncope (syncope)
:: Chronic cough can cause exhaustion and irritability headaches difficulty sleeping urinary incontinence syncopal episodes sore throat self consciousness and fear of underlying serious illness
56. Syntax (syntax)
:: It appears to be the case that no language has its word order or anything about its syntax determined by facts of pronunciation
57. Thorn (pos)
:: I just keep staring at the rose the petals the long yellow stamens stem the fat red thorns wanting to say so much
58. Vowel (cim)
:: In Chinese pronunciation basic vowels can form vowel combinations with each other or with a nasal consonant
59. Word (lo lus)
:: John you have my word well talk about those other officers and what theyre struggling with right now
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Android App
iPhone App
Chrome Extension
All Hmong Newspapers
Your Favorite Words
Currently you do not have any favorite word. To make a word favorite you have to click on the heart button.
Your Search History
You have no word in search history!
All Dictionary Links
English to Afrikaans Dictionary
English to Albanian Dictionary
English to Amharic Dictionary
English to Armenian Dictionary
English to Azerbaijani Dictionary
English to Basque Dictionary
English to Belarusian Dictionary
English to Bosnian Dictionary
English to Bulgarian Dictionary
English to Catalan Dictionary
English to Cebuano Dictionary
English to Chichewa Dictionary
English to Chinese Dictionary
English to Corsican Dictionary
English to Croatian Dictionary
English to Czech Dictionary
English to Danish Dictionary
English to Dutch Dictionary
English to Esperanto Dictionary
English to Estonian Dictionary
English to Filipino Dictionary
English to Finnish Dictionary
English to French Dictionary
English to Frisian Dictionary
English to Galician Dictionary
English to Georgian Dictionary
English to German Dictionary
English to Greek Dictionary
English to Haitian Dictionary
English to Hausa Dictionary
English to Hawaiian Dictionary
English to Hebrew Dictionary
English to Hmong Dictionary
English to Hungarian Dictionary
English to Icelandic Dictionary
English to Igbo Dictionary
English to Indonesian Dictionary
English to Irish Dictionary
English to Italian Dictionary
English to Japanese Dictionary
English to Javanese Dictionary
English to Kazakh Dictionary
English to Khmer Dictionary
English to Korean Dictionary
English to Kurmanji Dictionary
English to Kyrgyz Dictionary
English to Lao Dictionary
English to Latin Dictionary
English to Latvian Dictionary
English to Lithuanian Dictionary
English to Luxembourgish Dictionary
English to Macedonian Dictionary
English to Malagasy Dictionary
English to Malayalam Dictionary
English to Maltese Dictionary
English to Maori Dictionary
English to Mongolian Dictionary
English to Burmese Dictionary
English to Norwegian Dictionary
English to Pashto Dictionary
English to Persian Dictionary
English to Polish Dictionary
English to Portuguese Dictionary
English to Romanian Dictionary
English to Russian Dictionary
English to Samoan Dictionary
English to Serbian Dictionary
English to Shona Dictionary
English to Sindhi Dictionary
English to Sinhala Dictionary
English to Slovak Dictionary
English to Slovenian Dictionary
English to Somali Dictionary
English to Spanish Dictionary
English to Sundanese Dictionary
English to Swahili Dictionary
English to Swedish Dictionary
English to Tajik Dictionary
English to Turkish Dictionary
English to Ukrainian Dictionary
English to Urdu Dictionary
English to Uzbek Dictionary
English to Vietnamese Dictionary
English to Xhosa Dictionary
English to Yiddish Dictionary
English to Yoruba Dictionary
English to Zulu Dictionary
English to Bangla Dictionary
English to Hindi Dictionary
English to Tamil Dictionary
English to Telugu Dictionary
English to Gujarati Dictionary
English to Marathi Dictionary
English to Kannada Dictionary
English to Thai Dictionary
English to Welsh Dictionary
English to Arabic Dictionary
English to Malay Dictionary
English to Nepali Dictionary
English to Punjabi Dictionary