Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Her smooth breathing was interrupted now and again, caught up short.
Unlike the smooth breathing, it often occurs inside a word.
The later standard spelling of the name eta, however, has the smooth breathing.
Note: for the h sound, see rough breathing and smooth breathing.
From his Greek lexicon he discarded accents and smooth breathings.
All other Cyrillic-based modern writing systems are based on the Petrine script, so they have never had the smooth breathing.
It uses rough and smooth breathings, accents, and stichometrical points, not spaces, between the words.
The uncial letters are written separately, without breathings (rough breathing, smooth breathing) and accents.
The breathings (rough breathing, smooth breathing), and accents in red, they are given correctly, without any pretensions to correctness.
It contains breathings (rough breathing and smooth breathing) and accents and some images.
These symbols were the origin of the rough breathing and smooth breathing diacritics that became part of classical Greek orthography.
It has rough breathing, smooth breathing, and accents from the original scribe (prima manu), but often omitted or incorrectly placed.
Slow, smooth breathing counteracts what Ms. Landa called "the fear-tension-pain syndrome," the notion that women fear birth, so their muscles tense up, resulting in pain.
The breathings (rough and smooth breathing) and accents (see e.g. Greek diacritics) are given fully and usually correctly.
Coronis, the symbol written over a vowel contracted by crasis, was originally an apostrophe after the letter, but today is usually written as a smooth breathing.
It was formerly an apostrophe placed after the contracted vowel, but is now placed over the vowel and is identical to the smooth breathing.
Smooth breathings were also used in the early Cyrillic and Glagolitic alphabets when writing the Old Church Slavonic language.
Modern Church Slavonic orthography uses smooth breathing sign (Greek and Church Slavonic: psili, Latin: spiritus lenis) above the initial vowels (just for tradition, there is no difference in pronunciation).
By the time lower case letters, iota subscripts, accent marks, rough or smooth breathing marks over letters, and punctuation appeared in written Greek in the Middle Ages, Attic Greek writings had not been produced by native speakers for some centuries.