Language, Band 28George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1952 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 55
Seite 210
... phoneme accounts in most cases for what we actually find . The favoring of the strong phoneme must have been due to its use when the word was pro- nounced in isolation and after a pause , i.e. in cases where the identity of the word was ...
... phoneme accounts in most cases for what we actually find . The favoring of the strong phoneme must have been due to its use when the word was pro- nounced in isolation and after a pause , i.e. in cases where the identity of the word was ...
Seite 364
... phoneme / e / occurs only after palatalized consonants ; the phoneme / o / occurs after the non - palatalized labials and dentals , after velars , and after the hush - type sibilants and / y / . After the symbols 1 , n , r we find the ...
... phoneme / e / occurs only after palatalized consonants ; the phoneme / o / occurs after the non - palatalized labials and dentals , after velars , and after the hush - type sibilants and / y / . After the symbols 1 , n , r we find the ...
Seite 378
... phoneme proceeds is the following : We may say that a phoneme is a family of sounds in a given language which are related in character and are used in such a way that no one member ever occurs in a word in the same phonetic context as ...
... phoneme proceeds is the following : We may say that a phoneme is a family of sounds in a given language which are related in character and are used in such a way that no one member ever occurs in a word in the same phonetic context as ...
Inhalt
The IndoEuropean consonants in Albanian | 33 |
NOTES | 286 |
Studies in HispanoLatin homonymics pessulus pactus pectus | 299 |
Urheberrecht | |
12 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjectival adjective allophones American analysis appears Celtic class 50 cognate College common consonant contrast correlation corresponding derived descriptive linguistics despechar despecho dialect discussion distribution elements English environment equivalence classes Ethiopic Ethiopic languages etymology example forms Fuero geminates German Goth grammatical Greek Gurage Hitt Hittite indicate Indo-European Indo-European languages Indo-Hittite informants initial Institute intervocalic language laryngeal Latin lenition Library linguistic loanword meaning morphemes nasal noun occur original Oscan Osco-Umbrian pattern pechar pecho person pestillo Ph.D pheme phonemic phonological phrase plural prefix present problem pronunciation reflexes Review Romance scholars semantic components sememes sentence sequence Sidamo social sound Spanish speakers speech stem stress structure Sturtevant substitution suffix syllable symbols theory tiga tion Tocharian University variant verb vocabulary vowel William Dwight Whitney words Yale