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ELEMENTS IN EQUIVALENT ENVIRONMENTS . In the much more frequent case where two elements occur in environments which are almost but not quite identical , we may be able to collect them into one distributional class by setting up a chain ...
ELEMENTS IN EQUIVALENT ENVIRONMENTS . In the much more frequent case where two elements occur in environments which are almost but not quite identical , we may be able to collect them into one distributional class by setting up a chain ...
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But if we were to collect all the environments of the word of , we could not use the resulting equivalence class to build up a chain of further equivalences , because nothing else would be found in their environment .
But if we were to collect all the environments of the word of , we could not use the resulting equivalence class to build up a chain of further equivalences , because nothing else would be found in their environment .
Seite 474
We further collect those linguistic elements which have equivalent ( rather than identical ) environments , and we ... A is the environment of F , and F is the environment of A. ) This operation enables us to collect many or all of the ...
We further collect those linguistic elements which have equivalent ( rather than identical ) environments , and we ... A is the environment of F , and F is the environment of A. ) This operation enables us to collect many or all of the ...
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Inhalt
The IndoEuropean consonants in Albanian | 31 |
h before semivowels in | 41 |
The influence of Sidamo on the Ethiopic languages of Gurage | 63 |
Urheberrecht | |
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American analysis appears Associate assume become called College common comparative connection consider consonant contain contrast derived descriptive dialects discussion distinction distribution elements English environment equivalent evidence example existence expressed fact final forms German give given grammatical Greek historical Hitt Hittite indicate influence initial Institute Italy language later Latin Library linguistic material meaning method Michigan morphemes noun occur original particular pattern pecho person Ph.D phonemic phrase plural position possible present probably problem Professor pronunciation recorded reference relation represent Review Romance seems semantic sentence separate sequence similar social Society sound South speech statement stem stress structure suffix tion University various verb vowel words York