Language, Band 48,Ausgaben 1-2George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1972 |
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Seite 37
... vowel - like in their latter portion . The similarity between the development of syllabic sonorants into sequences of sonorant plus vowel ( peak reinforcement , §11 ) is immediately evi- dent , but it is not as straightforward as it may ...
... vowel - like in their latter portion . The similarity between the development of syllabic sonorants into sequences of sonorant plus vowel ( peak reinforcement , §11 ) is immediately evi- dent , but it is not as straightforward as it may ...
Seite 366
... vowels of the same phonological word , regardless of whether or not they were contiguous , would agree for this feature . On the other hand , in the traditional description of vowel harmony , high vowels would not agree in round- ing ...
... vowels of the same phonological word , regardless of whether or not they were contiguous , would agree for this feature . On the other hand , in the traditional description of vowel harmony , high vowels would not agree in round- ing ...
Seite 367
George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch. of vowel harmony , in which agreement is with the immediately preceding vowel , this fact is of course correctly captured . The second law of vowel harmony in Turkish is thus definitely in the form ...
George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch. of vowel harmony , in which agreement is with the immediately preceding vowel , this fact is of course correctly captured . The second law of vowel harmony in Turkish is thus definitely in the form ...
Inhalt
VOLUME 48 NUMBER 1 MARCH | 4 |
clauses | 109 |
PUBLISHED BY THE LINGUISTIC SOCIETY OF AMERICA | 256 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action alternative analysis appears apply argument assigned assume become called Chomsky claim clause clear complex concerned considered consonant constituent constraint contains course deletion derivation dialects diphthongization discussion distinction elements English evidence examples explain fact final function German give given global grammar hypothesis implies important interesting interpretation involved John kind language latter least less lexical linguistic marked meaning nature normal noted noun object observed occur original phonetic phonological phrase position possible preceding predicate present Press primary principle problem proposal question reason reference relations relative respect rules seems segments semantic sentences sound speakers specific speech stress structure suggests surface syllable syntactic syntax theory tion transformational types underlying University verb verbal vowel