How To Use Dissimilation In A Sentence
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This process is called dissimilation, essentially getting rid of the similar parts.
Podictionary - for word lovers - dictionary etymology, trivia & history
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A number of occupative names have lost the last syllable by dissimilation, e.g. Pepper for pepperer, Armour for armourer.
The Romance of Names
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The freedom dissimilation refers to the situation that people often can not achieve the ideal freedom and have not the free condition when they pursue freedom.
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Like Martin I too thought the different behaviour of your examples ‘hospital’ ‘orbital’ and ‘digital’ might be due to dissimilation, but the parallel with Italian ospedale vs orbitale and digitale, made me think it might be more likely to be because ‘hospital’ is of greater antiquity and familiarity than the other two, at least in their current main senses.
Hospital ~ orbital ~ digital | Linguism | Language Blog
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To call this process 'dissimilation' requires you to first describe in scientific terms what the originally common feature might have been between dental plosives and high vowels, otherwise it cannot be classified as dissimilatory in nature.
Japanese dialect mirrors suspected PIE development of sibilantization between two dental stops
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Among phonetic changes which occur with more or less regularity are those called aphesis, epenthesis, epithesis, assimilation, dissimilation, and metathesis, convenient terms which are less learned than they appear.
The Romance of Names
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It is a machine after all by person absorb, be still a person by machine dissimilation?
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There was no principle shift in glucose dissimilation during cell growth with different carbon substrates.
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By "dissimilation" I was naturally referring to the IE change, not the Japanese to clarify, I thought you might have had an argument for the lost vowel to have been a close one.
Japanese dialect mirrors suspected PIE development of sibilantization between two dental stops
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As a mechanism it isn't without problems, I admit: typically (in the examples I've seen, anyway) dissimilation leads to the substitution of another phoneme, not to the insertion of one (or the introduction of a new allophone).
Japanese dialect mirrors suspected PIE development of sibilantization between two dental stops
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Among phonetic changes which occur with more or less regularity are those called aphesis, epenthesis, epithesis, assimilation, dissimilation, and metathesis, convenient terms which are less learned than they appear.
The Romance of Names
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In some of these languages the rule is still productive, while others show only historical dissimilation.
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The dissimilation labor theory of Marx is had 2 heavy features and 2 serious effect.
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The initial *g was then lost due to dissimilation.
Indo-European (*)*ǵalak- 'milk'
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However, PEPCK was also present in the flesh of blueberries, raspberries, and redcurrants when there was no dissimilation of malate or citrate, and this raises the possibility that PEPCK might have additional functions.
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This is a great find and dissimilation on the Plein air to refined technique.
Plein Air and Poetry
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Abnormal administrative ethics is a dissimilation phenomenon of administrative power.
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As a mechanism it isn't without problems, I admit: typically (in the examples I've seen, anyway) dissimilation leads to the substitution of another phoneme, not to the insertion of one (or the introduction of a new allophone).
Japanese dialect mirrors suspected PIE development of sibilantization between two dental stops
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the Old French MARBRE became the English MARBLE by dissimilation
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It's not enough just to use 'dissimilation' without a clear description of the process firmly grounded in phonetics and acoustics.
Japanese dialect mirrors suspected PIE development of sibilantization between two dental stops
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It may be called dissimilation of a sort but this hardly explains it in itself.
Japanese dialect mirrors suspected PIE development of sibilantization between two dental stops
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In aquatic systems these processes are two orders of magnitude slower than assimilation and dissimilation.