Use "linguist|linguists" in a sentence

1. A linguist as well as an adventuress.

Linguistin und Abenteurerin?

2. Findings may be useful for cognitive scientists, theoretical linguists, computational linguists, developmental psychologists, educators, educational therapists, clinical scientists, parents and policymakers.

Die Erkenntnisse können für Kognitionswissenschaftler, theoretische Linguisten, Computerlinguisten, Entwicklungspsychologen, Lehrkräfte, Erzieher, pädagogische Therapeuten, klinische Wissenschaftler, Eltern und politische Entscheidungsträger von Nutzen sein.

3. The river was named for Joseph Brazeau, a linguist associated with the Palliser Expedition.

Der Fluss wurde nach Joseph Brazeau, einem Linguisten der Palliser-Expedition, benannt.

4. Milan Moguš (pronounced ; 27 April 1927 – 19 November 2017) was a Croatian linguist and academician.

Milan Moguš (* 27. April 1927 in Senj; † 19. November 2017 in Zagreb) war ein kroatischer Sprachwissenschaftler und Linguist.

5. Some linguists have claimed that these lexical suffixes provide only adverbial or adjectival notions to verbs. Other linguists disagree arguing that they may additionally be syntactic arguments just as free nouns are and thus equating lexical suffixes with incorporated nouns.

Seien a,b,c,... Elemente aus einem Alphabet , Seien v,w beliebige Zeichenketten über einem Alphabet.

6. It is named for the Brazeau River, in turn named for Joseph Brazeau, a linguist associated with the Palliser Expedition.

Brazeau County ist nach dem Brazeau River benannt, der wiederum nach Joseph Brazeau benannt ist, einem Linguisten, der an einer Expedition John Pallisers in diese Region teilnahm.

7. From 1898 to 1905 she was married to the statistician Sven Norrman and from 1906 to the linguist and educator Hjalmar Alving.

Von 1898 bis 1905 war sie mit dem Statistiker und Bürodirektor Sven Norrman und ab 1906 mit dem Sprachwissenschaftler Hjalmar Alving verheiratet.

8. The term ablaut (from German ab- in the sense "down, reducing" + Laut "sound") was coined in the early 19th century by the linguist Jacob Grimm , though the phenomenon was first described a century earlier by the Dutch linguist Lambert ten Kate in his book Gemeenschap tussen de Gottische spraeke en de Nederduytsche ("Commonality between the Gothic language and Dutch ", 1710 ).

Es wird manchmal zwischen qualitativem Ablaut (Wechsel des Vokals) und quantitativem Ablaut (Wechsel der Vokallänge) unterschieden. Die Bezeichnung für die Ablautstufen ist leider nicht einheitlich.

9. We must distinguish it clearly from other forms of gradation which developed later, such as Germanic umlaut (man/men, goose/geese, long/length, think/thought) or the results of English word-stress patterns (man/woman, photograph/photography). Confusingly, in some contexts, the terms 'ablaut', 'vowel gradation', 'apophony' and 'vowel alternation' may be heard used synonymously, especially in synchronic comparisons, but historical linguists prefer to keep 'ablaut' for the specific Indo-European phenomenon, which is the meaning intended by the linguists who first coined the word.

Ein schwaches Verb ist z.B. loben, der Stammvokal ändert sich bei der Vergangenheitsbildung nicht: loben, lobte, gelobt.

10. The Aymara language does have one surviving relative, spoken by a small, isolated group of about 1000 people far to the north in the mountains inland from Lima in Central Peru (in and around the village of Tupe, Yauyos province, Lima department). This language, known as Jaqaru/Kawki, is of the same family as Aymara, indeed some linguists refer to it as 'Central Aymara', alongside the main 'Southern Aymara' branch of the family spoken in the Titicaca region.

Die Dialekte dort hätten sich allmählich nach Süden in den bolivianischen Altiplano ausgeweitet und seien später schließlich vor allem von den Inka stark beeinflusst worden.