First Sentence:
I knew that Magyar belonged to the Ugro-Finnic group, part of the great Ural-Altaic family, 'Just', one of my new friends told me, 'as English belongs to the Indo-European.'
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs):
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natural serialisation, palatalised labials, superstrate speakers, morphosyntactic neologisms, lexical diffusion theory, bioprogram features, obsolescing languages, diffusing changes, younger fluent speakers, linguistic obsolescence, constructional iconicity, predisposing changes, clausal order, phonetically gradual, language suicide, postlexical rules, structural borrowing, rule reordering, analogical change, language murder, dialect borrowing, regularity hypothesis, transparency principle, nonfinite forms, recipient language
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs):
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Old English, Tok Pisin, Middle English, Great Vowel Shift, Grimm's Law, Transparency Principle, Traditional Dyirbal, Lexical Phonology, Young People's Dyirbal, Guyanese Creole, Humboldt's Universal, Martha's Vineyard, Kupwar Kannada, Scots Gaelic, Standard Generative Phonology, Trinidadian Creole, Universal Grammar, British English, Hawaiian Creole, Kupwar Urdu, Low German, Papua New Guinea, Stress Rules, East Sutherland, Natural Morphology
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