[
US
/ˌdaɪəˈkɹɪtək/
]
[ UK /dˌaɪəkɹˈɪtɪk/ ]
[ UK /dˌaɪəkɹˈɪtɪk/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
capable of distinguishing
students having superior diacritic powers
the diacritic elements in culture
NOUN
- a mark added to a letter to indicate a special pronunciation
How To Use diacritic In A Sentence
- Since this journal does not specialize in Islamic theology, I will, for simplicity's sake, omit many of the diacritics used in the English transliteration of Arabic terms.
- Because it was the English alphabet that was the standard, only a very few non-English accents and diacritics could be handled.
- His attention is called to syllabification as well as to diacritical marks. How to Teach Phonics
- The accents and other diacritical marks we now use to write ancient Greek are comparatively late inventions.
- The present orthographic system was introduced in the fourteenth century by the religious reformer Jan Hus, who instituted a system of diacritical markings to eliminate consonant clusters.
- It's actually a pretty straightforward quiz, no questions about the minor uses of parentheses or diacritics or anything like that.
- CREDITS: Ho usato questo sito per riprodurre correttamente i segni diacritici. No Fat Clips!!! : I Was a Teenage Intellectual
- They all contain numerous diacritic marks for which musical equivalents could be deduced.
- It is of course a Palandine name, which accounts for the diacritic, but despite the pronunciation and the obvious shortened form, it has nothing to do with the word hawk. Smallbold vacuums the cat
- Bill, try the following to allow your computer to make "foreign" diacritical marks in any document. Bon sang - French Word-A-Day