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Monosyllabic   Listen
Monosyllabic

adjective
1.
Having or characterized by or consisting of one syllable.



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Monosyllabic" Quotes from Famous Books



... a single monosyllabic predicate, this proposition is undoubtedly true. We have never heard that plants or trees were "made." They were ordered "to grow," or rather the earth was commanded to bring them forth, which is an equivalent induction. And the fact that they grow now, renders it absolutely ...
— Life: Its True Genesis • R. W. Wright

... want to be exotic. It's still pronounced Joe and that's his name. The language is monosyllabic and tonal. I happen to know a ...
— Blessed Are the Meek • G.C. Edmondson

... place, the Bible furnishes a far greater variety of the finest reading-lessons than any other book whatever. This is a point to which my attention has been turned for many years, and the conviction grows upon me continually. There is no book in which children a little advanced beyond the simplest monosyllabic lessons will learn to read faster, or more readily catch the proprieties of inflection, emphasis, and cadence, than the Bible. I would by no means put it into the hands of a child to spell out and blunder over the chapters before he has read any thing else. The word ...
— Popular Education - For the use of Parents and Teachers, and for Young Persons of Both Sexes • Ira Mayhew

... that the Captain said, and then relapsed into his usual good-tempered monosyllabic state; from which all the eager talk of the men, who took up the cudgels naturally enough for their own class, and talked themselves before the wine broke up into a renewed consciousness of their natural superiority, failed again ...
— Tom Brown at Oxford • Thomas Hughes

... suffixed to its noun it undergoes various changes. In its monosyllabic forms it drops its vowel after a short (un-accented) vowel, as in auga-t (the eye), but keeps it after a long vowel, as in ā-in (the river), trē-it (the tree). The dissyllabic forms drop their initial vowel almost everywhere; not, however, after the -ar, -r, of the gen. sg., nor ...
— An Icelandic Primer - With Grammar, Notes, and Glossary • Henry Sweet


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