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User talk:Brya
... use of an acute accent to indicate stress? I think it would be considered bizarre ... both of these conventions to indicate a "Latin" name) or to embolden it. (Even when ... an acute symbol to indicate the stressed syllable, thus: ˘ ¯ | ˘ ¯ | ˘ ¯ ... I think in an article which includes Latin names I would reserve single quotes for ... the use of an accent to give stress. I regard this as so normal ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Brya - 86k - Cached - Similar pages
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Talk:Pronunciation of asteroid names
... 1995), et al., including guides to pronouncing botanical and entomological names. Occasionally I'll call ... does not have primary and secondary lexical stress. Vowels may be full or reduced, and ... stressed vowel of a word takes phrasal stress as well. (Put a word like arachnophobia ... and you'll see that the "primary" stress is no stronger than the "secondary" stress.) Therefore I've marked all stressed ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Pronunciation_of_asteroid_names - 27k - Cached - Similar pages
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Talk:Cannabis
... leaves of the plant, with the proper botanical name of Cannabis Sativa. Hemp is same ... is the root of the Greek and latin words for kannabis; that part of the ... and they obviously dont speak Greek and Latin! There is no credible evidence to show ... name is odd in Hebrew. Usually the stress of a noun is on the last syllable, whereas qěnĒh bOśem has two medial ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Cannabis - 77k - Cached - Similar pages
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