Sanakirja
Tekoälykääntäjä
Kuvat 2

Vaihtoehtoiset kirjoitusmuodot

Ääntäminen

  • ÄäntäminenSouthern England:
    • IPA: /ˌɡlɒsəˈleɪliə/
  • RP:
    • IPA: /ˌɡlɒsəˈleɪliə/
  • GA:
    • IPA: /ˌɡlɑsəˈleɪliə/
KieliKäännökset
espanjaglosolalia
norjatungetale
ranskaglossolalie
saksaZungenreden
suomikielilläpuhuminen, glossolalia
tanskatungetale

Määritelmät

Substantiivi

  1. Speaking a language one does not know, or speaking elaborate but apparently meaningless speech, while in a trance-like state (or, supposedly, under the influence of a deity or spirits); speaking in tongues.
  2. Synonym of xenoglossy (“knowledge of a language one has never learned”).

Esimerkit

  • But glossolalia by definition makes no such sense, because it consists of strings of syllables, made up of sounds taken from all those that the speaker knows, put together more or less haphazardly but emerging nevertheless as word-like and sentence-like units because of realistic, language-like rhythm and melody.
  • Lorenzo is still kneeling at the box, once more Luisa wipes her eyes, Violeta is sobbing and rocking, her glossolalia now at the -sə-sə-sə-level of near exhaustion.
  • As he indicated in the subtitle of his study, Flournoy regarded Smith's Martian as a kind of "glossolalia." In this category, he also included her "Hindu," "Ultra-Martian," and the other extraterrestrial tongues that she would later speak.
  • Everything was a labyrinthine amalgam of languages, a towering Babel of puns and glossolalia.

Taivutusmuodot

Monikkoglossolalias

Speaking a language one does not know, or speaking elaborate but apparently meaningless speech, while in a trance-like state (or, supposedly, under the influence of a deity or spirits); speaking in tongues.

An icon depicting the Theotokos with the apostles filled with the Holy Spirit, indicated by "cloven tongues like as of fire" (Acts 2:3) above their heads

Speaking a language one does not know, or speaking elaborate but apparently meaningless speech, while in a trance-like state (or, supposedly, under the influence of a deity or spirits); speaking in tongues.

Headline about the "Weird babel of tongues" and other behavior at Azusa Street, from a 1906 Los Angeles Times newspaper