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I ate a sweet pair of pears for dessert.
No, tingo and tinta are not minimal pairs in Italian.Specifically, minimal pairs are words that have close spellings but for one sound even though they have different meanings. The one sound often may involve a different consonant or vowel or the single incidence versus the doubling of a consonant. Instead, the verb tingo forms a minimal pair with the verb tengoin Italian.
Technically, not quite, because the consonants are also different, [d] vs. [ɹ]. "dole" and "doll" form a minimal pair though, [ɔ] (in the US, [əʊ] in the UK) vs [ɑ] (US; UK [ɒ]).
'Peer' is not a homophone for the other two, at least not in British English. We say it to rhyme with 'ear', not 'air'. However, you could have 'The peer planted a pair of pear trees.'
When two integers are added and have a sum of zero.
yes, it is a minimal pair because they both end with "ger"
by using x-ray
Is a pair of words which differ in pronunciation in only one sound
Your question doesn't make any sense. Is this really the question you are trying to ask? Are you trying to determine the max bandwidth that can be achieved using twisted pair?
In phonology, minimal pairs are pairs of words or phrases in a particular language, which differ in only one phonological element, such as a phone, phoneme, toneme or chroneme and have distinct meaning.An example is comb and rome. The phonemic transcription of comb is [komb] and the phonemic transcription of rome is [rown]. Therefor this pair of words constitute a minimal pair: initial consonant.
Pat fat
On a 2-D graph, a pair of numbers are used to determine the position of the point on a graph.
an ordered pair Coordinates.
I ate a sweet pair of pears for dessert.
A pair of numbers are usually (x,y) if u want to determine a point on a graph. Find the value for both x and y and then plot them on a graph
Plug your ordered pair into both of your equations to see if you get they work.
Lol im just wasting your time.....just go eat some pie dude