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Synonyms for euphonic
Grammar : Adj |
Spell : yoo-fon-ik |
Phonetic Transcription : yuˈfɒn ɪk |
Définition of euphonic
- adj melodious
- The application of euphonic rules was more or less arbitrary.
- Extract from : « Games and Songs of American Children » by Various
- Containing the Latin amnis, river, or only a euphonic form of Clitunnus?
- Extract from : « The River-Names of Europe » by Robert Ferguson
- There is a euphonic law for every language; all idioms must have an accent.
- Extract from : « Delsarte System of Oratory » by Various
- This root is most readily found in the 1st Fut., subject only to euphonic changes.
- Extract from : « Greek in a Nutshell » by James Strong
- Some euphonic changes occur in making these additions, which then take the regular declensional endings.
- Extract from : « Greek in a Nutshell » by James Strong
- There are auxiliary verbs, and no small amount of euphonic changes; of which one, more especially, deserves notice.
- Extract from : « Opuscula » by Robert Gordon Latham
- And although Gizzard felt that the euphonic effect of Tobin & Cane would have been an improvement, he acquiesced.
- Extract from : « Sube Cane » by Edward Bellamy Partridge
- The Irish Gaelic, above most other languages, illustrates a euphonic principle that modifies the vowels of a word.
- Extract from : « The English Language » by Robert Gordon Latham
- The euphonic reason for the -s, in must, is sufficient to show that it is in a different predicament from durst.
- Extract from : « The English Language » by Robert Gordon Latham
- Each nation considers its own language, each tribe its own dialect, euphonic.
- Extract from : « English Synonyms and Antonyms » by James Champlin Fernald
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Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019