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Seite 46
10 W In complex words , Umlaut predictably does not apply to syllables that are unstressed or bear secondary stress : ( 35 ) lugát ' place ' i lugátña ' his place ' pulónnun ' trigger fish ' i pululónña ' his trigger fish ' mundóŋgu ...
10 W In complex words , Umlaut predictably does not apply to syllables that are unstressed or bear secondary stress : ( 35 ) lugát ' place ' i lugátña ' his place ' pulónnun ' trigger fish ' i pululónña ' his trigger fish ' mundóŋgu ...
Seite 54
Though somewhat redundant , the assumption of lexical stress would allow us to state 38 directly as a morpheme - structure condition : ( 51 ) Mid vowels occur in stressed closed syllables , and high vowels occur elsewhere .
Though somewhat redundant , the assumption of lexical stress would allow us to state 38 directly as a morpheme - structure condition : ( 51 ) Mid vowels occur in stressed closed syllables , and high vowels occur elsewhere .
Seite 78
Both Halle - Keyser and Kiparsky permit extra - metrical syllables at the ends of verse lines . Inversion tests confirm not only that such syllables are permitted , but also that they are preferred over added internal syllables ...
Both Halle - Keyser and Kiparsky permit extra - metrical syllables at the ends of verse lines . Inversion tests confirm not only that such syllables are permitted , but also that they are preferred over added internal syllables ...
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Inhalt
Sound change in perception and production Tore Janson | 18 |
Transderivational relationships in Chamorro phonology Sandra Chung | 35 |
Generative tests for generative meter Gilbert Youmans | 67 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acceptable analysis appear apply approach argues argument Assignment assume Chap claim communication complex concerned consider constituent constructions contains context contrastive defined definition deletion derivation dialect discourse discussion English evidence examples exist expressions fact FIGURE final focus formal French function German give given grammar historical important interesting interpretation introduced inversions involved issues John kind language lexical lines linguistic logical meaning metrical movement natural norm Note noun object occur particular phonological phrase position possible present Press problem production proposal question reference relation relative represent responses rules seems semantics sense sentences social sound speakers speech stress structure suggests syllables syntactic syntax Table theory topic University variants verbs volume vowel York