Sinónimos
Examples for "form"
Examples for "form"
1It's not just about state violence in the form of police violence.
2However, second normal form is only one of many possible normal forms.
3The banks' recent run of good form came to an end today.
4The Scottish professional teams have shown good form this year in France.
5As a result it was impossible to form an effective parliamentary government.
1Its earliest manifestations took, just as in Bohemia, a literary or linguistic form.
2As the Turkish government forbids public meetings for political purposes, the propaganda takes an ecclesiastical and linguistic form.
3This battle between the established linguistic form and the new content gives rise to charming, but at the same time alarming, conflicts.
4For example, thinking about dying and the imagining of it -it must be connected to its cultural forms and to broader linguistic forms.
1Unfortunately Hanslick meant something altogether different from the Herbartians by his use of the word form.
2This was seen for both groups of children for word form recall and for children with DLD for meaning.
3Discovered by Dehaene, it is called the "visual word form area" and is located behind the left ear.
4Therefore it is argued that this patient had damage to an early stage in the reading process, to the visual word form itself.
5It is therefore concluded that PD reads words more slowly because of an additional impairment at the level of the word form system.
1Even in my dream I spoke to Halum in the polite grammatical form.
2Peru has stores of a grammatical form which has happily perished in Europe.
3Either the third person must be used, or some new grammatical form invented.
4The grammatical form is "The ninth of December," never "December the ninth," nor "December ninth."
5The student should carefully note all those constructions in which the grammatical form and the logical force differ.
1The source language forms of the selected idioms have not been included.
2GCL is the common language formed spontaneously between people in their inter-relations along the milleniums.
3The languages formed principally by aggregation seem themselves to oppose obstacles to the improvement of the mind.
4This uniformity of language formed a league between these nations which would have been broken with the utmost difficulty.
5But it is also about memory, the way that language forms our myths, the ways in which our traditions are fortuitous, accidental.
Translations for language form