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In linguistics, mutual intelligibility is a relationship between languages or dialects in which speakers of different but related varieties can readily ...
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When a speaker of one language can understand what a speaker of another language is saying but not the other way around, it is called asymmetric intelligibility ...
Uniquely for Balto-Slavic languages, Bulgarian and Macedonian have also developed articles (the indefinite article being an unmarked noun while the definite one ...
Intelligibility may refer to: Look up intelligibility in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Mutual intelligibility, in linguistics; Intelligibility ...
The lexical similarity is only one indication of the mutual intelligibility ... Unlike mutual intelligibility, lexical similarity can only be symmetrical.
Some dialects of a language are not mutually intelligible in spoken form, leading to debate as to whether they are regiolects or separate languages.
Many spoken dialects may be mutually unintelligible, but the literary dialect unites them, and they all learn it as the language of education. Arabic is ...
Adjective edit · mutually intelligible (not comparable). (linguistics) Of two or more speech varieties, able to be understood by one another's speakers.
This is a map of languages that are mutually intelligible (based on Wikipedia and testimony from native speakers at UC Berkeley). This map is not meant to ...