Language, Band 58,Ausgaben 3-4George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1982 |
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Seite 547
... segments , cannot be properly treated if there is no real struc- tural unit corresponding to a syllable . Among the first to depart from the ' syllable boundary ' representation of syllabic structure was Kahn , who assumed that segments ...
... segments , cannot be properly treated if there is no real struc- tural unit corresponding to a syllable . Among the first to depart from the ' syllable boundary ' representation of syllabic structure was Kahn , who assumed that segments ...
Seite 548
... segments can be treated definitionally as those associated with either the onset or the margin , while [ + syllabic ] segments are exactly those that make up the nucleus of a syllable . Thus the difference between vowels and semivowels ...
... segments can be treated definitionally as those associated with either the onset or the margin , while [ + syllabic ] segments are exactly those that make up the nucleus of a syllable . Thus the difference between vowels and semivowels ...
Seite 549
... segments has a considerable degree of predictability ; but this can be captured perfectly well within the grammar of ... segments at an appropriate intermediate stage of derivations . Rules can manipulate either segmental or syllabic ...
... segments has a considerable degree of predictability ; but this can be captured perfectly well within the grammar of ... segments at an appropriate intermediate stage of derivations . Rules can manipulate either segmental or syllabic ...
Inhalt
Intonation and its parts Dwight Bolinger | 505 |
The analysis of French shwa Stephen R Anderson | 534 |
Prosodic structure and Expletive Infixation John J McCarthy | 574 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action affected agent allow alternations analysis appear apply aspect assume auxiliary boundary cause Chap claim concerned considered consonant construction contains context contrast course deletion described dialect discussion distinct English ergative evidence examples existence expression fact final formal French function further give given grammar implies important Infixation initial instances interesting interpretation involved John language lexical linguistic look marked meaning modals morphological nasal natural noted nouns object observed occur particular person phonetic phonology plural position possible preceding predict present Press principles problem processes proposed question reference requires respect restricted result rule seen segments semantic sentences shwa speakers speech stress structure suggest syllable syntactic syntax Table tense theory transitive treated types University verb vowel York