Language, Band 24George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1948 |
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Seite 122
... listener , since none of the stop itself can be heard . On the other hand , the fact that the final [ t ] overlaps more than the latter half of the vowel is of prime im- portance to the listener , for this modification of the vowel is ...
... listener , since none of the stop itself can be heard . On the other hand , the fact that the final [ t ] overlaps more than the latter half of the vowel is of prime im- portance to the listener , for this modification of the vowel is ...
Seite 123
... listener can get out of a consonantal segment itself is just barely enough evidence to classify it as voiced or voiceless , stop , fricative , or resonant . The rest of the evidence , which classifies the con- sonant as to PLACE of ...
... listener can get out of a consonantal segment itself is just barely enough evidence to classify it as voiced or voiceless , stop , fricative , or resonant . The rest of the evidence , which classifies the con- sonant as to PLACE of ...
Seite 124
... listener , when he in turn becomes a speaker , innervates his articulatory organs so as to produce the same sort of sounds as he HEARD . Now if his neural patterns in the language aspect were fully as smooth and blended as the sounds he ...
... listener , when he in turn becomes a speaker , innervates his articulatory organs so as to produce the same sort of sounds as he HEARD . Now if his neural patterns in the language aspect were fully as smooth and blended as the sounds he ...
Inhalt
DEDICATION LIBRARY | 1 |
Word Ends and Haplology | 47 |
Taboos on Animal Names | 56 |
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acoustic phonetics adjectives adverb allophones American amplitude articulation articulatory aspect BERNARD BLOCH Bloomfield brain buckram centiseconds Chourm components compound consonant curve decibels Definition dialect diphthong discussion English EThrace exactly repetitive example filter formant formant chart free variation French frequency fricative German glottal glottis Greek HALL JR HANS KURATH harmonic analysis Hittite innervation wave language Latin Library linguistic Linguistic Society listener M. B. EMENEAU meaning morphemes nasal ne-present neuter normal nouns occur Old Church Slavic pattern perception Ph.D phonemes phonology phrase pitch plural Postulate present Professor pronoun r-color resonance resonance band sample segments Serving through 1948 shape singular sinusoidal slur smear Society of America sound waves speaker spectrogram spectrum speech stem stress suffix syllable theory tion Tocharian tongue utterance verb vocal voice vowel color whistle word zero