Language, Band 65,Ausgaben 3-4Linguistic Society of America, 1989 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 61
Seite 473
... vowel quality . The spectra of the naturally- produced oral vowels of §4.3 showed low - amplitude nasal formants , indicating nasal coupling . With other vowels , the amount of coupling indicated by the amplitude of the nasal formant ...
... vowel quality . The spectra of the naturally- produced oral vowels of §4.3 showed low - amplitude nasal formants , indicating nasal coupling . With other vowels , the amount of coupling indicated by the amplitude of the nasal formant ...
Seite 474
... vowels of different lengths nor acoustic measures of such vowels would correspond directly to perceived nasality . And to explain the change in EA , we need to find evidence of perceptible nasality , since we assume that listeners will ...
... vowels of different lengths nor acoustic measures of such vowels would correspond directly to perceived nasality . And to explain the change in EA , we need to find evidence of perceptible nasality , since we assume that listeners will ...
Seite 480
... vowel system has been reconstructed with two nasal vowels , * ē and * õ ( Lounsbury 1978 ) . PEA had the oral counterparts of both of those vowels , and either or both of them would seem to provide a better vehicle for directly modeling ...
... vowel system has been reconstructed with two nasal vowels , * ē and * õ ( Lounsbury 1978 ) . PEA had the oral counterparts of both of those vowels , and either or both of them would seem to provide a better vehicle for directly modeling ...
Inhalt
Elucidation of | 457 |
American English spelling | 487 |
Saussurean studiesEtudes saussuriennes | 518 |
Urheberrecht | |
12 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
agreement analysis appear approach argues argument argument structure called century chapter claim clause clitic Cloth communication condition consider constructions contains context contrast dependent described dimension direct discourse discussion distinction duration effect English evidence example expressions fact final French function genres German gerund given grammar head historical illustrate important indicates initial interesting interpretation inversion involved issues John language letters lexical linguistic marked Mary meaning nasal nature nominal notes noun object occur oral original particular period person phrase plural position possible present Press principles problem pronoun properties proposed Propositional provides question reader reading reference reflexive relation relatively represent require rules semantic sentence shows social speakers speech structure style suggests syntactic syntax texts theory topic University verb volume vowels York