English, asked by BimanKarmakar, 10 months ago

English philology Monosyllabism short note​

Answers

Answered by abcd5296
1

same like the first answer

Answered by krishna210398
0

Answer:

IN EXPLANATION

Explanation:

A monosyllabic language is a language wherein phrases predominantly include a unmarried syllable. An instance of a monosyllabic language could be Old Chinese or Vietnamese. Monosyllabism is the call for the belongings of unmarried-syllable phrase form. The herbal supplement of monosyllabism is polysyllabism. Whether a language is monosyllabic or now no longer occasionally relies upon at the definition of "phrase", that's some distance from being a settled rely amongst linguists. For instance, Modern Chinese (Mandarin) is ""monosyllabic"" if every written Chinese man or woman is taken into consideration a phrase; that's justified through looking at that maximum characters have right meaning(s) (despite the fact that very conventional and ambiguous).However, maximum entries in a Chinese dictionary are compounds of  or extra characters; if the ones entries are taken as the "phrases", then Mandarin isn't always genuinely monosyllabic, most effective its morphemes are. A monosyllable can be complicated and encompass seven or extra consonants and a vowel (CCCCVCCC or CCCVCCCC as in English "strengths") or be as easy as a unmarried vowel or a syllabic consonant. Few recognized recorded languages keep easy CV bureaucracy which seemingly are absolutely practical roots conveying meaning, i.e. are phrases—however aren't the discounts from in advance complicated bureaucracy that we discover in Mandarin Chinese CV bureaucracy, nearly usually derived with tonal and phonological changes from Sino-Tibetan.

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