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. |
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Seite 9
... sentences in which they occur . The reason why the order of symbols in a row may differ from the order of elements in a sentence , is that our linguistic knowledge of sentence structure enables us to deal with the elements separately ...
... sentences in which they occur . The reason why the order of symbols in a row may differ from the order of elements in a sentence , is that our linguistic knowledge of sentence structure enables us to deal with the elements separately ...
Seite 17
... sentences ) we view the original sentence as Casals who S2S1 , we analyze it as CCS2S1 , and divide it into two intervals CS2 and CS1 , with the result that S2 and S1 are equivalent since they both occur after C. The only difference ...
... sentences ) we view the original sentence as Casals who S2S1 , we analyze it as CCS2S1 , and divide it into two intervals CS2 and CS1 , with the result that S2 and S1 are equivalent since they both occur after C. The only difference ...
Seite 19
... sentences are so different from each other ; when this happens , we find that by comparing the sentences of the text we can sometimes show that one section of one sentence is equivalent ( for this text ) to a different section of another ...
... sentences are so different from each other ; when this happens , we find that by comparing the sentences of the text we can sometimes show that one section of one sentence is equivalent ( for this text ) to a different section of another ...
Inhalt
The IndoEuropean consonants in Albanian | 33 |
NOTES | 286 |
Studies in HispanoLatin homonymics pessulus pactus pectus | 299 |
Urheberrecht | |
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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