Portal da Supercincronicidade

Phoneme that many times forms a syllable with the previous consonant, such as l and r in a-ble and pro-pri-e-tor.

Latin used in the production of literary works, be it classical, medieval or modern.

Word or phrase that arrives to a language, borrowed from another, as in E. money, borrowed from Fr. monnaie.

See Latin.

See Symmetry.

Phonetic mutation, transformation of one sound into another over time.

Vowel articulated with the tongue in an intermediate position between the roof and the floor of the mouth, such as [ɛ], [e], [ɔ] and [o], for example.

See Mirror nations.

The mirror language of a Romance language is the corresponding language in synchronistic terms in the Germanic family and vice versa.

Nations that present countless synchronicities between themselves in their history, geography, language, culture and other social facts.

See Symmetry.

See Latin.