Language, Band 57George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1981 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
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... boundaries is vacuous , since it is true by definition . The reason that proponents of NGP insist upon the exclusion of word boundaries from P - rules is their adherence to a re- quirement that no non - phonological information play a ...
... boundaries is vacuous , since it is true by definition . The reason that proponents of NGP insist upon the exclusion of word boundaries from P - rules is their adherence to a re- quirement that no non - phonological information play a ...
Seite 586
... boundaries to be phonemes ; boundary phenomena are then either their allo- phones , or the allophones of phonemes contiguous to them ( Trager & Bloch 1941 , Bloch & Trager 1942 , Z. Harris 1942 , Hockett 1955 , Hyman 1956 ) . Ac ...
... boundaries to be phonemes ; boundary phenomena are then either their allo- phones , or the allophones of phonemes contiguous to them ( Trager & Bloch 1941 , Bloch & Trager 1942 , Z. Harris 1942 , Hockett 1955 , Hyman 1956 ) . Ac ...
Seite 587
... boundaries other than syllable boundary and pause , but it does so at the cost of appearing to make claims that apparently are not intended . The consequence of the current NGP position is that either ( a ) the features introduced or ...
... boundaries other than syllable boundary and pause , but it does so at the cost of appearing to make claims that apparently are not intended . The consequence of the current NGP position is that either ( a ) the features introduced or ...
Inhalt
Anthony J Naro | 63 |
Halle and P Kiparsky | 150 |
Resolving the Neogrammarian controversy | 267 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent addition alternative analysis appear argument basic boundaries Chap claim Class clauses color communication comparative considered contains contrast deletion derived described dialects diffusion direct discussion distinction drift effect elements English event evidence example existence explanation fact factors FIGURE forms French function German give given grammar important indicate interesting interpretation involved Jewish Jewish languages John language lexical linguistic marked meaning names natural object occur original particular pattern person phonetic phonological position possible present Press problem proposed question reason reference relative represents rules semantic sentences sharings similar Slavic social sound speakers speech standard stems stress structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table tense theory University variation verb volume vowel Yiddish York