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COMPETING CHANGES AS A CAUSE OF RESIDUE WILLIAM S - Y . WANG University of California , Berkeley Phonological change may be implemented in a manner that is phonetically abrupt but lexically gradual . As the change diffuses across the ...
COMPETING CHANGES AS A CAUSE OF RESIDUE WILLIAM S - Y . WANG University of California , Berkeley Phonological change may be implemented in a manner that is phonetically abrupt but lexically gradual . As the change diffuses across the ...
Seite 500
In his discussion , Hall actually uses three different terms for what I have called the ' law of the regularity of phonetic change ' : ' principle ' , ' assumption ' , and ' postulate ' . Of these , ' principle ' is perhaps vaguest ...
In his discussion , Hall actually uses three different terms for what I have called the ' law of the regularity of phonetic change ' : ' principle ' , ' assumption ' , and ' postulate ' . Of these , ' principle ' is perhaps vaguest ...
Seite 505
phonemic formula , not a phonetic description . The sense of this passage not only fails to agree with an ' assumption of proto - language uniformity ' , but seems to attribute the impression of uniformity of the proto - language to the ...
phonemic formula , not a phonetic description . The sense of this passage not only fails to agree with an ' assumption of proto - language uniformity ' , but seems to attribute the impression of uniformity of the proto - language to the ...
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Inhalt
I | 1 |
harmony | 45 |
Modules of grammar acquisition | 60 |
Urheberrecht | |
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alternation American analysis appear apply Associate break called chapter clause comparative considered consonant construction contains course Department derived dialects dictionary discussion distinction distribution English evidence example expected fact Figure forms function further German give given grammar indicate instances interesting interpretation involved Japanese kind labial language later least less light linguistic marked material meaning Michigan morphemes nature noise noted noun object occur original pairs pattern Ph.D phonetic phonological phrase position possible present probably problem Professor question reason reference relative responses result rules seems sense sentence Society sound speakers speech statement structure suffix suggest syllable Table theory tion UNIT University utterance verb vowel York