Southeast Asian languages
Southeast Asian languages family of languages, sometimes also called Austroasiatic, spoken in SE Asia by about 80 million people. According to one school of thought, it has three subfamilies: the Mon-Khmer languages, the Munda languages, and the Annamese-Muong subfamily. There is considerable evidence but as yet no definite proof that these groups are derived from a single ancestor language, which is the essential requirement for classification in the same linguistic family.
The use of the term Southeast Asian languages in this article is based on linguistic considerations; however, the term is also employed by some scholars in a geographical sense to include three distinct language families of the region, namely, Malayo-Polynesian languages , Sino-Tibetan languages , and Mon-Khmer languages. A grouping together of the Malayo-Polynesian and Southeast Asian (or Austroasiatic) languages into a single Austric family has also been proposed on the basis of certain phonetic, lexical, and grammatical similarities, but this grouping has not yet been generally accepted.
The Mon-Khmer Subfamily
Languages of the Mon-Khmer subfamily include Cambodian (or Khmer), Mon (or Talaing), and a number of other languages, such as Cham of Cambodia and southern Vietnam, Semang and Sakai of the Malay Peninsula, Nicobarese of the Nicobar Islands, and Khasi of Assam in India. Grammatically, the Mon-Khmer languages make great use of affixes (prefixes, infixes, and suffixes). They are agglutinative in that different linguistic elements, each of which exists separately and has a fixed meaning, are often joined to form one word. Cambodian and Mon have their own scripts, which are descended from alphabets of India. Both are written from left to right.
The Munda Subfamily
The languages of the Munda subfamily are spoken in parts of N and central India and comprise more than 20 tongues, the most important of which is Santali. The Munda languages use affixes extensively and are agglutinative. There are two genders for nouns in most of the Munda tongues, animate and inanimate. Most Munda languages also have three numbers—singular, dual, and plural. Suffixes and particles placed after the noun are used to express such features as number and possession, which are often indicated in Indo-European tongues by case inflection.
The Annamese-Muong Subfamily
The Annamese-Muong subfamily is composed of Muong and Vietnamese (also called Annamese). Vietnamese is basically monosyllabic, but it has many words of two or more syllables. It is also tonal, with six tones that frequently help to distinguish homonyms. Vietnamese uses particles but has no prefixes and suffixes. Word order is very important for showing grammatical relationships since there is no inflection. The vocabulary has many loanwords from Chinese. An alphabet based on Roman letters and adapted for Vietnamese, as by adding diacriticals, is generally used today in place of the traditional Chinese-type writing of the past. The classification of Vietnamese is still disputed; some regard it as a Mon-Khmer tongue, others as a Tai (or Thai) language (see Sino-Tibetan languages ), and still others as a language unrelated to any other known tongue.
Bibliography
See N. H. Zide, ed., Studies in Comparative Austroasiatic Linguistics (1966).
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Pre-facing simile vehicles in Dante Gabriel Rossetti's sonnets.(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Style; 12/22/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...argues, but between "illustrative simile, and modeling simile or metaphor." It is the latter that...in a modeling than in an illustrative simile. The most effective and original modeling similes, as Eva Kittay explains, are those...
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"So stretched out huge in length": reading the extended simile.
Magazine article from: Style; 9/22/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...study of the extended simile may offer some insights...trope and genre. Homeric similes often interrupt a story...which examined the simile in relation to the literal...nature is what makes simile, and not metaphor...matter of implication, similes appear in a limited number...
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And now, similes as graceful as a sculpted sentence
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 6/16/1991; ; 700+ words
; ...have been examining similes, trying to analyze...winners in our Grand Simile Contest of 1991...combination of metaphor and simile that won Best of...more than 10,000 similes. The "graceful...at the scores of similes that were based upon...Every word of a simile has to be in the...
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Stormy weather!(Skill: Use Similes and Metaphors)(Brief article)
Magazine article from: WR News, Senior Edition (including Science Spin); 3/16/2007; 700+ words
; ...You might want to use similes and metaphors to get your point across. A simile compares two things using...statement. Examples: Simile The yard looked like...witnessed. Be sure to use similes and metaphors to make...descriptive. Answer Key 1. simile, 2. metaphor, 3...
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Similes as slick as a watermelon seed
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 7/9/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...Today we are talking similes. The good ones combine...Take apart an effective simile, and you won't find...from the page of student similes: "Long separated by...editing would save that simile, but it serves to make the point. Keep your similes tight, and keep them...
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Winning Similes Keen As a Sharpened Eye
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 12/18/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...winners in the Great Simile Contest of 1994. In Section One, we sought similes for something having...judge this year's Great Simile Contest I set aside the...years. They knew a good simile when they hit one. Their...along - that the best similes come from keen observation...
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A simile is the explicit comp ...
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 11/9/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...compression. By contrast, the simile is a form of analogical...digressive impulse in similes that keeps extending...Breton). All good similes depend upon a certain...being compared. The simile asserts a likeness between...Pablo Neruda thinking in similes in his magisterial early...
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As Forlorn as a Mountain of Also-Ran Similes
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 11/7/1993; ; 700+ words
; The Great Simile Contest of 1993...contest sought similes for "slender...good, but the simile lacked oomph...10 stock"? Similes should have no...do not a good simile make. Most of the also-ran similes suffered for want...
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Similes that are `as serene as a snowman's smile'
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 6/2/1991; ; 700+ words
; ...in the contest to provide a simile for "serene." The winner...awarded a $25 prize for the best similes for slippery, serene, rough...send in more than 10,000 similes. Entries came from all over...of the elements that make a simile work. A simile should be compact...
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Similar similes.(Skill: Use Figurative Language)
Magazine article from: WR News, Senior Edition (including Science Spin); 12/1/2006; 587 words
; Similes are statements that...that best completes the simile. 1. Brian is as smart...that best completes the simile. 11. He is as skinny...a--. 15. Write a simile comparing someone or...include at least three similes.
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SIMILE
Book article from: Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
SIMILE. A FIGURE OF SPEECH , in which...realistic comparison and not a simile, but The Assyrian came down...on the fold (Byron) is a simile because neither savagery nor...Everyday usage is rich in similes, many of them idiomatic...
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simile
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
simile [Lat.,=likeness], in rhetoric...contains two straightforward similes: My love is like a red, red...tune. The epic, or Homeric, simile is an elaborate, formal, and sustained simile derived from those of Homer.
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epic simile
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
epic simile, an extended simile which compares one composite action with another, often with a digressive effect; it originates in Homer , and was imitated by Virgil , Dante , and, in English, notably by Milton . It is frequently parodied by Fielding .
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LITERATURE
Book article from: Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language
...deliberately arranged and controlled. It may be said that communication is impossible without artifice, yet there is a difference between the colloquial simile that someone is ‘as bold as brass’ and T. S. Eliot's simile
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Porter, Cole
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre
...Still of the Night’ to the witty sexual cynicism of ‘My Heart Belongs to Daddy’, the extended similes of ‘You're the Top’ and ‘Let's Do It’, and the Latin American ‘...
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