basque language
常見(jiàn)例句
- Basque people; of no known relation to any other language.
巴斯尅人的語(yǔ)言;和任何語(yǔ)言都沒(méi)有關(guān)系。 - According to the terminology of linguistic typology, Basque is a SOV (subject-object-verb) language, and Spanish or English are, on the other hand, SVO type.
根據(jù)語(yǔ)言標(biāo)示學(xué)中的術(shù)語(yǔ)學(xué),巴斯尅語(yǔ)是SOV(主語(yǔ)-賓語(yǔ)-動(dòng)詞)結(jié)搆的語(yǔ)言,而西班牙語(yǔ)或英語(yǔ)則是SVO(主語(yǔ)-動(dòng)詞-賓語(yǔ))的結(jié)搆。 - Urla, Jacqueline. "Contesting modernities: Language standardization and the production of an ancient modern Basque culture. " Critique of Anthropology 13, no. 2 (1993): 101-118.
競(jìng)爭(zhēng)的現(xiàn)代性:語(yǔ)言標(biāo)準(zhǔn)化與一個(gè)古老現(xiàn)代的巴斯尅文化之産生〉《人類學(xué)評(píng)論》 十三卷二期(1993年)101-118頁(yè)。 - While Mr Ibarretxe struggled to learn the complex Basque language—a necessity for anyone with ambitions in the party—Mr Ardanza pulled him into the government in 1995, made him his deputy and set him to handle complex financial negotiations with the central government.
ECONOMIST: Charlemagne - In Idaho and Nevada, many cities hold annual Basque festivals with traditional sporting contests—weight-carrying, wood-chopping, sheep-hooking and pelota (similar to jai-alai in America)—as well as dancing exhibitions, Basque-language Catholic masses and bread-baking contests.
ECONOMIST: American festivals: Basques abound The - Language is an issue in the Basque country, too.
ECONOMIST: Catalan zeal 返回 basque language