Synonym: linguistic scientist, polyglot. Similar words: linguistic, distinguish, distinguished, anguish, multilingual, guise, disguise, sanguine. Meaning: ['lɪŋgwɪst] n. 1. a specialist in linguistics 2. a person who speaks more than one language.
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(31) He had little advanced education, but he was a gifted linguist.
(32) I'm afraid I'm no linguist, ie I am poor at foreign languages.
(33) Roman Jakobson, the outstanding Russian American linguist and literary theorist of the 20th century, has explored the verbal art from the structural-functional perspective.
(34) Roman Jakobson , a famous linguist, is the first person that adopts the permian semiotics.
(35) Z. S. Harris, the famous American Descriptive Linguist, divides his linguistic study into three stages:"Structure-analysing", "Transformation-analysing"and "Operator Grammar".
(36) He was a gifted linguist and taught Latin and Greek.
(37) As a pioneer linguist, Noam Chomsky enjoys a position within linguistics probably unprecedented in the whole history of the subject.
(38) Here the lexicographer has to be his own linguist and have recourse to the linguistic analysis of the language.
(39) Emic : a term in contrast with etic which originates from American linguist Pike's distinction of phonetics and phonemics.
(40) The linguist does not need to be a consummate phonologist.
(41) The 102-year-old linguist is renowned as the "father of pinyin", the system for representing standard Mandarin in the Roman alphabet.
(42) He used to be a teacher till he turned writer ( linguist ).
(43) And human language uses this amazing trick described by Ferdinand de Saussure, the great linguist, as "The arbitrariness of the sign."
(44) Wang Zheng was a successful scientist, linguist, phonologist, translator as well a publisher in the late Ming dynasty.
(45) No serious linguist, journalist or politician would dare pass judgment on Tagalog or Malayalam without having gathered facts on those languages.
(46) Only philosophers would ever notice such things and perhaps the odd linguist.
(47) The task for the linguist is to describe adequately this system of rules and explain how they work.
(48) From Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure, language study entered into a new stage from the frame of traditional linguistics theory.
(49) Personally, I answer to the latter question with a quote from linguist Max Weinreich, who wrote a multivolume history of Yiddish.
(50) This then is the object of Saussure's attention as a linguist and as a semiotician.
(51) Etic: a term in contrast with emic which originates from American linguist Pike's distinction of phonetics and phonemics.
(52) Watters, a registered nurse and linguist,[www.Sentencedict.com] experienced the devastation of AIDS firsthand.
(53) Bart de Boer, a linguist at the University of Amsterdam, adds that the paper "looks methodologically quite sound."
(54) A linguist of astonishing voracity, Mr Ostler plunges happily into his tales from ancient history.
(55) What we are going to introduce briefly is the predication analysis proposed by linguist G Leech.
(56) American linguist Charles J. Fillmore's case grammar theory and its advancing FrameNet are widely applied in English teaching.
(57) Lexical Semantics, written by British linguist D. A. Cruse, was published in 1986, and the book drew much attention in the linguistic field.
(58) In the 1960s, linguist Noam Chomsky correctly noted that there are an infinite number of English phrases; for example "big deal, " "really big deal, " "really, really big deal, " and so on.
More similar words: linguistic, distinguish, distinguished, anguish, multilingual, guise, disguise, sanguine, guideline, relinquish, altruistic, ring up, relinquishment, bring up, spring up, cling, ruling, sibling, inkling, ceiling, rolling, jostling, rambling, appalling, glinting, buckling, appealing, startling, compelling, sparkling.