Rule of ablaut reduplication
This week, the English language rule (actually two) came up, which you may not know, but which you can learn by learning and using the language. The first word could be a so-called exact reduplication, in which you literally take only the first words and repeat them.
As Forsyth explains, reduplication is the process of repeating a word by changing a consonant or singing a song. Reductions are when words (or parts of words) are repeated, sometimes modified, and sometimes added to make them more or less similar to each other or to other words in the same language. This is when the word or part of a word is repeated and modified or added to another, making it less or more like one of the first words or another word in another language, such as English. REDUPLICATIONS are words or parts of words that are repeated, modified and added in a similar way to each other or in other languages, so that they come as close as possible to the original word, but not quite the same word. REDUplications are when words / parts of a word sometimes repeat or change, modify or add something other than the initial word to bring it closer to a particular word than to a single word (e.g., "the first word").
Reduplication in linguistics is the process of repeating a word by changing a consonant or singing a song. Copies of the text are those in which only the vowels are changed (e.g. "the first word" and "a").
In this type of reduplication, the word must follow the vowel rule, where it is in the order of its vowels and where the tongue is placed high in the mouth or lower. If there is a difference between the order of the vowels "a" and "o," then the following rule applies: If there are two words with the same number of vowels but different placement of the tongues (e.g. "the first word"), then we must proceed in this order:
English-speaking native speakers who know this great law of language, but do not really know it, and the bad wolf simply obeys it. Technically, this rule is broken if you follow the rule of reduplication (i.e. the order of vowels, not the size used in the opinion). Native English speakers who know this larger language law; in reality, he does not know; and in reality, the "Big Bad Wolf" has simply followed it!
Little Red Riding Hood may be perfectly orderly, but the "big bad wolf" seems to be breaking the law of linguistics. Little Red Riding Hood may be "perfectly ordered," but "The Big Bad Wolf" seems to have broken the laws of language. Little Red Riding Hood may be "perfectly fine," but the "big bad wolf" seems to be breaking this law in linguistics.
You will notice that the first example I used, "Little Red Riding Hood Rolls," does not follow this rule. This is because it breaks the adjective-order rule, which in this case is annulled by ablaut-reduplication. The big bad wolf breaks them by putting size before opinion, and size before opinion.
If you have two words, the first vowel in both words must be the same (i.e. a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, j, k, l, m, n, And so on). This dictates that when you duplicate a word combination, the sound "pit" (e or "see") is always placed first before the "o" sound (pit - e - see). When you do this, ablaut - reduplication is referred to by the technical name "a - o - a - b - c - d - f - n - g - h - m," and the second vowel is either an "A" or an "O."
This is the rule that says that the explorative inserted should be done immediately after the syllable with the most natural stress. So if you change the first letter and add the beginning, you know that, but you can't change it if the word has a negative prefix like "un - freakin - believable." However, when you do this, you change your first syllables (incredible, incomprehensible, etc.), so you have to change them all.
While you're at it, you might spend the last five minutes looking for an exception to rule number one. This rule can be attributed exclusively to human ingenuity and our preference for fine-sounding language. One thing that many people who struggle with the petty - crooked rules often ignore is that if a grammar rule triggered you, there's probably a good chance you did it right without even thinking about it. Before we get into all the "don'ts" that will make you tear your hair out, let's take a look at some of the strangest grammar rules you never knew you knew.
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