Contractions are don't, didn't, won't, etc...
The English definition for the word subject is "a person or thing that is being discussed, described, or dealt with."
"Del" is one of the two "official" contractions in the Spanish language, formed from "de el", or "of the". The other is "al", form "a el", meaning "to the".
German has that stuff.
Written contractions are fairly recent. They are attempts to record in spelling the way people actually pronounce certain word combinations when speaking easily and informally. These "contracted" pronunciations, however, are very old, going all the way back to the earliest period of English.
That has no meaning in English.
what is intonation
Uterine contractions have the same name in medical terminology and lay language. The medical terminology combining form meaning uterine contractions is toco-.
The English definition for the word subject is "a person or thing that is being discussed, described, or dealt with."
"Del" is one of the two "official" contractions in the Spanish language, formed from "de el", or "of the". The other is "al", form "a el", meaning "to the".
Contractions
YES!
The medical term for wave-like contractions is peristalsis. This is the rhythmic muscular movements that helps propel food and other materials through the digestive tract.
contract=contact means to get shorter or to shrink in size.=
German has that stuff.
The eponym for those contractions is Braxton-Hicks.
Tachycardia
the form to wich a word or a phrase is redused by contractions and omissions