User:Dan Pelleg/test for lede/css display property inline-table
The graphic appearance of the "grammar-button" in the examples for this proposal is only a makeshift solution; if the proposal is accepted then a better graphic solution must be devised before implemented.
The following tests use the css property "inline-table" which in Internet Explorer only sometimes works properly. If your Internet Explorer displays the "grammar-button" in the modified versions in a separate line instead of within the line, go here to view the same tests with css display property "inline", which works for Internet Explorer.
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[edit]In a right triangle, the cathetus (originally from the Greek word Κάθετος, plural Κάθετοι; its plural in English is catheti because it comes more directly from the Latin transliteration cathetus, whose plural is such), most commonly known simply as a "leg" is either one of the two sides which are adjacent to the right angle in a right triangle.
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[edit]grammar |
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originally from the Greek word Κάθετος, plural Κάθετοι; its plural in English is catheti because it comes more directly from the Latin transliteration cathetus, whose plural is such |
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[edit]The octopus (/ˈɒktəpʊs/, from Greek ὀκτάπους (oktapous), "eight-footed", with plural forms: octopuses /ˈɒktəpʊsɪz/, octopi /ˈɒktəpaɪ/, or octopodes /ɒkˈtɒpədiːz/; see below) is a cephalopod of the order Octopoda.
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/ˈɒktəpʊs/, from Greek ὀκτάπους (oktapous), "eight-footed", with plural forms: octopuses /ˈɒktəpʊsɪz/, octopi /ˈɒktəpaɪ/, or octopodes /ɒkˈtɒpədiːz/; see below |
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[edit]Phlox (pronounced /flɒks/ or "flocks"; from the Latin for a flame-colored flower, which is from the Greek φλόξ, meaning 'flame'; plural "phlox" or "phloxes"; Greek φλόγες, phlóges) is a genus of 67 species of annual or perennial flowering plants.
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pronounced /flɒks/ or "flocks"; from the Latin for a flame-colored flower, which is from the Greek φλόξ, meaning 'flame'; plural "phlox" or "phloxes"; Greek φλόγες, phlóges |
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[edit]The hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius) or hippo (Greek: ἱπποπόταμος, hippopotamos, from ἵππος, hippos, "horse", and ποταμός, potamos, "river", plural: hippopotamuses or hippopotami) is a large, mostly plant-eating mammal in sub-Saharan Africa, and one of only two extant species in the family Hippopotamidae (the other is the Pygmy Hippopotamus).
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Greek: ἱπποπόταμος, hippopotamos, from ἵππος, hippos, "horse", and ποταμός, potamos, "river", plural: hippopotamuses or hippopotami |
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[edit]Magi (Latin plural of magus, ancient Greek magos,Persian "مغ", English singular 'magian', 'mage', 'magus', 'magusian', 'magusaean') is a term, used since at least the 4th century BCE, to denote a follower of Zoroaster, or rather, a follower of what the Hellenistic world associated Zoroaster with, which was – in the main – the ability to read the stars, and manipulate the fate that the stars foretold.
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[edit]grammar |
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Latin plural of magus, ancient Greek magos,Persian "مغ", English singular 'magian', 'mage', 'magus', 'magusian', 'magusaean' |
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[edit]The ballista (Latin, from Greek βαλλίστρα - ballistra and that from - βάλλω ballō, "to throw"), plural ballistae, was a weapon developed from earlier Greek weapons.