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Seite 156
To bring home the point that languages may differ greatly in the number and placement of phoneme boundaries, the author cites ... a general description of the acoustic cues on which the network of phonemic contrasts in a language rests.
To bring home the point that languages may differ greatly in the number and placement of phoneme boundaries, the author cites ... a general description of the acoustic cues on which the network of phonemic contrasts in a language rests.
Seite 306
But the uniformity condition ( 2 ) requires them to say that if ( Iə ) is an allophone of a unit phoneme , [ ei ] must be an allophone of a unit phoneme also . What of the other side of the coin ? If ( ei ) is treated as a phonemic ...
But the uniformity condition ( 2 ) requires them to say that if ( Iə ) is an allophone of a unit phoneme , [ ei ] must be an allophone of a unit phoneme also . What of the other side of the coin ? If ( ei ) is treated as a phonemic ...
Seite 308
It is possible to treat the Charleston dialect as having the phoneme / 1 / with the allophone ( 1 ) before ... ai / in five in Charleston alongside / ay / in Rochester and / ae / in Winchester requires yet another phonemic heterogloss .
It is possible to treat the Charleston dialect as having the phoneme / 1 / with the allophone ( 1 ) before ... ai / in five in Charleston alongside / ay / in Rochester and / ae / in Winchester requires yet another phonemic heterogloss .
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Inhalt
The ontogeny of English phrase structure The first phase | 1 |
Greek heisa and Sanskrit sátsat | 15 |
Lexicostatistically determined borrowing and taboo | 21 |
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alternation American analysis appears Assistant Professor Associate Calif called chapter College communication comparative consider consonant construction contains contrast corresponding Department derived described dialects dictionary discussion distinction element English evidence example fact final formal function German give given grammar important indicate Institute interesting interpretation Italy John language later lexical Library linguistic material meaning Michigan morpheme names nature noun object occur original Ph.D phonemic position possible present probably problem Professor Professor of English question reason recorded reference relation represent require Research root rules seems semantic sense sentence sequence similar sound speakers speech structure suffix suggested syllable theory tion unit University variants verb vowel words written York