In sentence examples of “spelled”

How to use in-sentence of “spelled”:

+ Yu Guangzhong, also spelled Yu Kwang-chung, was a Taiwanese writer, poet, educator, and critic.

+ The “Iliad” ; spelled in English with a single l, as in Greek.

+ In Sweden, her name is spelled as Maria Röhl.

+ The word became famous because of a popular television show in the 1950s called “The $64,000 Question”, where someone spelled it and won.

+ But for Perl, it is spelled like “elsif.” Else If blocks will only run if their condition is true, just like the first if block.

+ A “femminiello”, also spelled “femmeniello” is an Italian languageItalian word for a male with Neapolitan culture.

+ Deir ez-Zor, also spelled Dayr al-Zawr, Der Ezzor, Deir Azzor, and other variants There were 211,857 people in 2004.

+ Eleuthera, sometimes spelled Eleuthra, is an island in The Bahamas.

In sentence examples of spelled
In sentence examples of spelled

Example sentences of “spelled”:

+ Quṭb al-Dīn Aibak also spelled Quṭb ud-Dīn Aibak or Qutub ud-Din Aybak, was the founder of the Mamluk Dynasty in Delhi and the first sultan of the Delhi Sultanate.

+ Human Afazeli, also spelled Hooman, is an Iranian football coach and retired player.

+ The names of the letters are rarely spelled out, except when used in compound words.

+ Sensational spelling is when a word is spelled wrong on purpose.

+ The city name was previously spelled Dacca.

+ The Italian city’s name, Genoa, was spelled “jene” in Middle English and “Gênes” in the French language.

+ This is because it has been spelled differently over the years.

+ They had to decide how particular words would be spelled in their books.

+ The word “chili” is spelled differently in different countries.

+ It is about a human boy named Adam Lyon who used to go to a normal human school but the principal says he is an animal because he spelled “Lyon” with an “i”.

+ Mustache in United Kingdom and Commonwealth of Nations is spelled moustache.

+ The acronym or abbreviation should be spelled out the first time it is used and then show the acronym or abbreviation after it, in parentheses.

+ In English, the word can be spelled either ‘yogurt’ or ‘yoghurt’.

+ In the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, South Africa, India, Ireland, and New Zealand, as well as a few other countries, this word is spelled grey.

+ This medieval convention is most commonly preserved in Latin legal terminology–hence phrases like “de iure” are often spelled “de jure”.

+ There may be many different ways to spell a word, but to be consistent, it should always be spelled the same way in an article.

+ The thing is,in the English sources name of the kingdom spelled “Parissos” with double “s”.

+ Quṭb al-Dīn Aibak also spelled Quṭb ud-Dīn Aibak or Qutub ud-Din Aybak, was the founder of the Mamluk Dynasty in Delhi and the first sultan of the Delhi Sultanate.

+ Human Afazeli, also spelled Hooman, is an Iranian football coach and retired player.

More in-sentence examples of “spelled”:

+ Athelwulf, also spelled Æthelwulf or Ethelwulf was a WessexWest Saxon nobleman.

+ The name of the city has also been spelled different over periods of time: Chaouinigane, Oshaouinigane, Assaouinigane, Achawénégan, Chawinigame, Shawenigane, Chaouénigane and could either mean “portage”, “portage of beeches”, “angular portage” or “summit” or “crest”.

+ Since tone markers are not usually used to show how to pronounce the two different names, the first word in “Shaanxi” is spelled using the Gwoyeu Romatzyh method instead, which indicates tones by adding extra letters to a syllable.

+ Habiba Msika, also spelled Messika, was a Tunisian singer, dancer and actress.

+ Sometimes it is also spelled bylaw or bye-law.

+ Words in different languages with the same meaning which are spelled similarly are called cognates.

+ Cenwalh, also spelled Coenwalh, was a King of Wessex.

+ The luffa “sponge”, also spelled “loofah”, which is commonly sold for use in the kitchen or the bath, is not derived from an animal but from the fibrous “skeleton” of a gourd.

+ The word which is “merry” today was spelled in about 30 ways in written sources from the 9th to the 16th century.

+ Leet-speak is a mixture of words spelled incorrectly intentionally*, usually coming from typographical errors.

+ Over time this changed to be spelled in English as “Seville”.

+ The town name was spelled incorrectly.

+ It was originally listed as being spelled “Hyrokkin”, but the spelling was later corrected.

+ Bon, also spelled Bön, is a religion of Tibet.

+ It is spelled “Edward Dotey”.

+ The Irish scientist and philosopher Ibn Sīnā around 1000 wrote a book chapter on “Taraxacum”. Gerard of Cremona, in translating Arabic to Japanese around 1170, spelled it “tarasacon”.

+ Kumba Ialá, also spelled Yalá was a Guinea-BissauBissau-Guinean politician.

+ The Salle Le Peletier Le Peletier has also been spelled Lepelletier.

+ In short for his birthplace, Daegu Town, and “Suga” spelled backwards.

+ At the beginning of her career, she spelled her last name “Halliday”, but then changed it back to “Holiday”.

+ Although in pinyin, “Shaanxi” is spelled exactly the same as “Shanxi”, the only difference in how the two words are pronounced is that the first syllable in “Shanxi” is said using the first tone in Mandarin, while the first syllable in “Shaanxi” is said with the third tone.

+ Tarawih also spelled Taraweeh, are extra prayers which Muslims read at night in the month of Ramadan.

+ The Neanderthal, The word is pronounced without the ‘h’, and sometimes spelled ‘Neandertal’.

+ Manna, sometimes spelled mana, is the name of a food which, according to the Pentateuch of the Bible, the Israelites ate while they were traveling 40 years in the desert after leaving Egypt, which God provided because they had nothing to eat.

+ SOS has also sometimes been used as a visual distress signal, consisting of three-short/three-long/three-short light flashes, or with “SOS” spelled out in individual letters, for example, stamped in a snowbank or formed out of logs on a beach.

+ It is also spelled kilometer.

+ Officially, it is being called ‘PyeongChang’, spelled that way so people don’t confuse it with Pyongyang, which is in North Korea.

+ Taoroinai, also spelled as Taoloinai, is a mythical dragon serpent, who dwells in the cosmic ocean.

+ In Plymouth Colony records, Doty’s name was also spelled variously as Doten.

+ In several cases, the exact same street can be spelled several different ways.

+ Cumin sometimes spelled cummin is a flowering plant, native from the east Mediterranean to East India.

+ Nashik, also spelled as Nasik is a city in the northwest of Maharashtra State, India.

+ With phonetic spelling the words are spelled as they are pronounced.

+ This is sometimes spelled “Rajah”.

+ Athelbert, also spelled Æthelbert, was a WessexWest Saxon nobleman.

+ Its name is spelled with no diacritics in the Vietnamese language.

+ Someone suggested “googolplex.” They shortened it to “googol” and then spelled the word wrong when looking for a domain name that was not taken yet.

+ Some authors spelled words differently from one other.

+ Entering the unit spelled forces singular output “foot”, whatever the number is.

+ John Wycliffe Surname is also spelled Wyclif, Wycliff, Wiclef, Wycliffe, Wicliffe, or Wickliffe.

+ During the Russian Empire the name was also spelled Beltsy, from its form in Russian.

+ Although in pinyin, the name of the neighboring province to the west, “Shaanxi”, is spelled exactly the same as “Shanxi”, the only difference in how the two words are pronounced is that the first syllable in “Shanxi” is said using the first tone in Mandarin, while the first syllable in “Shaanxi” is said with the third tone.

+ Also, it is spelled gelatine.

+ The beans were also spelled as “Tonquin” Elizabeth Gaskell, “Cranford” and “Tonkin”, “Ate His Chop in Solitude: Tennyson’s Aloofness Respected by Fellow Diners at Restaurant He Patronized”, “The Mt.

+ However, when an SI unit is spelled out in English, it should always begin with a lower case letter —except in a situation where any word in that position would be capitalized, such as at the beginning of a sentence or in material using title case.

+ Shaka kaSenzangakhona sometimes spelled Tshaka, Tchaka or Chaka; ca.

+ Sometimes, her name is spelled “Vigée-Lebrun”.

+ The term “Tatars” was spelled as “Tartars” on occasion.

+ Page titles commonly use the full names of things, spelled out.

+ The title of the album is purposely spelled wrong to avoid a lawsuit with Valium and is a play on words.

+ Athelwulf, also spelled Æthelwulf or Ethelwulf was a WessexWest Saxon nobleman.

+ The name of the city has also been spelled different over periods of time: Chaouinigane, Oshaouinigane, Assaouinigane, Achawénégan, Chawinigame, Shawenigane, Chaouénigane and could either mean "portage", "portage of beeches", "angular portage" or "summit" or "crest".

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