Below you will find example sentences with "naming pattern". The examples show how this phrase is used in natural context and which words often surround it.
Naming Pattern in a sentence
Corpus data
- Displayed example sentences: 4
- Discovered as a combination around: pattern
- Corpus frequency in the collocation scan: 5
- Phrase length: 2 words
- Average sentence length: 19.8 words
Sentence profile
- Phrase position: 2 start, 1 middle, 1 end
- Sentence types: 4 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis
- The phrase "naming pattern" has 2 words and usually appears near the start in these examples. The average sentence has 19.8 words and is mostly made up of statements.
- Around this phrase, patterns and context words such as have a naming pattern based on, the arab naming pattern, arab, similar and ethiopian stand out.
- In the phrase index, this combination connects with same pattern, similar pattern, weather pattern, same pattern, similar pattern and weather pattern, linking the page to nearby combinations.
Example types with naming pattern
This selection groups the examples by length and sentence type, making usage of the full phrase easier to scan:
The naming pattern in Unicode is, by example, error. (9 words)
Somalia Somalis also have a naming pattern based on the Arab naming pattern, very similar to the Ethiopian naming pattern. (20 words)
Ethiopian and Eritreans use a naming pattern very similar to the Arab naming pattern, but with one exception: no suffix or prefix. (22 words)
Historical and current use Africa Traditionally Muslim and non-Arabic speaking African people, such as Hausa and Fulani people usually (with some exceptions) follow the Arab naming pattern. (28 words)
Ethiopian and Eritreans use a naming pattern very similar to the Arab naming pattern, but with one exception: no suffix or prefix. (22 words)
Somalia Somalis also have a naming pattern based on the Arab naming pattern, very similar to the Ethiopian naming pattern. (20 words)
Example sentences (4)
Somalia Somalis also have a naming pattern based on the Arab naming pattern, very similar to the Ethiopian naming pattern.
Ethiopian and Eritreans use a naming pattern very similar to the Arab naming pattern, but with one exception: no suffix or prefix.
Historical and current use Africa Traditionally Muslim and non-Arabic speaking African people, such as Hausa and Fulani people usually (with some exceptions) follow the Arab naming pattern.
The naming pattern in Unicode is, by example, error.