Lexicographical Neighbors of Sibilated
Literary usage of Sibilated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Chambers's Encyclopaedia: A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge (1901)
"Its peculiarities are the sibilated r, which is harsher than the rz of the Poles,
and the distinct possession of both quantity and accent, so that the Latin ..."
2. A Cyclopædic Dictionary of the Mang'anja Language Spoken in British Central by David Clement Ruffelle Scott (1892)
"Of course these letters are no more sibilated k and g, than f and « are sibilated
p and b : the most one can say about them is that they are ..."
3. Latin Pronunciation and the Latin Alphabet by Leonhard Tafel (1860)
"In these forms the letter t by the influence of the vowel i waa sibilated into
z, and the vowel i after performing this use waa dropped, [not always, ..."
4. Hermathena by Trinity College (Dublin, Ireland) (1893)
"This is wrong; the .y is primitive, and is dropped in the Greek word. Are we to
say in a parallel case that sudo is ' sibilated from ..."
5. A Practical Introduction to Latin Prose Composition by Thomas Kerchever Arnold (1844)
"But Hand makes sic a sibilated form of Aie, so that sic and ita differ, according
to him, as Aie and is. ..."
6. An Introduction, Phonological, Morphological, Syntactic to the Gothic of Ulfilas by Thomas Le Marchant Douse (1886)
"(4) The palatals may pass into various sibilated ... (5) The velars themselves
may be palatalized (though not sibilated) by the influence of a subjoined ..."
7. Manual of Linguistics: A Concise Account of General and English Phonology by John Clark (1893)
"(with small arch over guttural), k (Sk. s) has become a sibilated spirant in
Sanskrit; all three (k, g, g/i) have become sibilated ..."
8. Manual of Linguistics: A Concise Account of General and English Phonology by John Clark (1893)
"... the characters used to represent them are k, g, gh (with small arch over
guttural), k (Sk. s) has become a sibilated spirant in Sanskrit; all three (/£ ..."