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  2. Leipzig–Jakarta list - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leipzig–Jakarta_list

    The word list is named after the cities of Leipzig, Germany, and Jakarta, Indonesia, the places where the list was conceived and created. In the 1950s, the linguist Morris Swadesh published a list of 200 words called the Swadesh list, allegedly the 200 lexical concepts found in all languages that were least likely to be borrowed from other ...

  3. Swedish alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_alphabet

    sh in all positions in many English loanwords sj in many native Swedish words sk in native Swedish words before the front vowels e, i, y, ä, ö skj in five words only, four of which are enumerated in the phrase I bara skjortan skjuter han skjutsen in i skjulet (In just his shirt he pushes the vehicle into the shed).

  4. Skáldskaparmál - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skáldskaparmál

    The Skáldskaparmál is both a retelling of Norse legend as well as a treatise on poetry. It is unusual among surviving medieval European works as a poetic treatise written both in and about the poetry of a local vernacular language, Old Norse; other Western European works of the era were on Latin language poetry, as Latin was the language of scholars and learning.

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  6. Swedish phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_phonology

    These are mostly words that were monosyllabic in Old Norse, but have subsequently become disyllabic, as have many loanwords. [76] For example, Old Norse kømr ('comes') has become kommer in Swedish (with an acute accent). [75] The distinction can be shown with the minimal pair anden 'the mallard' (tone 1) and anden 'the spirit' (tone 2).

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  8. Slovak orthography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slovak_orthography

    There are some more examples of heterophonic homographs like this. When a voiced obstruent (b, d, ď, dz, dž, g, h, z, ž) is at the end of the word before a pause, it is pronounced as its voiceless counterpart (p, t, ť, c, č, k, ch, s, š, respectively). For example, pohyb is pronounced and prípad is pronounced .

  9. Slovak declension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slovak_declension

    Slovak, like most Slavic languages and Latin, is an inflected language, meaning that the endings (and sometimes also the stems) of most words (nouns, adjectives, pronouns and numerals) change depending on the given combination of the grammatical gender, the grammatical number and the grammatical case of the particular word in the particular sentence: