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1076 "World countries, states, and provinces where English is a primary language are dark blue; countries, states and provinces where it is an official but not a primary language are light blue. English is also one of the official languages of the European Union.\n" +
1144 "The countries with the highest populations of native English speakers are, in descending order: United States (215 million),[16] United Kingdom (58 million),[17] Canada (17.7 million),[18] Australia (15 million),[19] Ireland (3.8 million),[17] South Africa (3.7 million),[20] and New Zealand (3.0-3.7 million).[21] Countries such as Jamaica and Nigeria also have millions of native speakers of dialect continuums ranging from an English-based creole to a more standard version of English. Of those nations where English is spoken as a second language, India has the most such speakers ('Indian English') and linguistics professor David Crystal claims that, combining native and non-native speakers, India now has more people who speak or understand English than any other country in the world.[22] Following India is the People's Republic of China.[23]\n" +
1159 "In many other countries, where
1239 "Where symbols appear in pairs, the first corresponds to American English, General American accent; the second corresponds to British English, Received Pronunciation.\n" +
1305 "English is a strongly stressed language, in that certain syllables, both within words and within phrases, get a relative prominence/loudness during pronunciation while the others do not. The former kind of syllables are said to be accentuated/stressed and the latter are unaccentuated/unstressed. All good dictionaries of English mark the accentuated syllable(s) by either placing an apostrophe-like ( ? ) sign either before (as in IPA, Oxford English Dictionary, or Merriam-Webster dictionaries) or after (as in many other dictionaries) the syllable where
1356 "An exception to this and a peculiarity perhaps unique to English is that the nouns for meats are commonly different from, and unrelated to, those for the animals from which they are produced, the animal commonly having a Germanic name and the meat having a French-derived one. Examples include: deer and venison; cow and beef; swine/pig and pork, or sheep and mutton. This is assumed to be a result of the aftermath of the Norman invasion, where a French-speaking elite were the consumers of the meat, produced by English-speaking lower classes.\n" +
3306 " are serviced via mmap(), where the worst case wastage is 2 *\n" +
3920 " is available, it is used as a backup strategy in cases where\n" +
4208 " Equivalent to memalign(pagesize, n), where pagesize is the page\n" +
4367 " where several structs or objects must always be allocated at the\n" +
4546 " sometimes be wasteful (in cases where programs immediately\n" +
4567 " program undergoes phases where several large chunks are\n" +
4569 " storage, perhaps mixed with phases where there are no such\n" +
4591 " Also, trimming is not generally possible in cases where\n" +
4628 " systems where sbrk is relatively slow, it can pay to increase\n" +
5163 " Where \"chunk\" is the front of the chunk for the purpose of most of\n" +
6370 " just to find out where the end of memory lies.\n" +
6458 " results of second call, and conservatively estimate where\n" +
6606 " Only proceed if end of memory is where we last set it.\n" +
6614 " and instead call again to find out where new end of memory is.\n" +
6753 " bins. Note that this step is the only place in any routine where\n" +
6842 " the only step where an unbounded number of chunks might be\n" +
8125 " regions in those cases where they do happen to be contiguous.\n" +