Language, Band 59George Melville Bolling, Bernard Bloch Linguistic Society of America, 1983 Proceedings of the annual meeting of the Society in v. 1-11, 1925-34. After 1934 they appear in Its Bulletin. |
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... argument is advanced regarding their status as prototypical animals . With regard to the second theme , the examples are better selected . The only representatives of broader classes are fertile and barren , which are freely usable with ...
... argument is advanced regarding their status as prototypical animals . With regard to the second theme , the examples are better selected . The only representatives of broader classes are fertile and barren , which are freely usable with ...
Seite 610
... argument ; b . The sibilant - voicing argument ; c . The slow - speech argument ; d . The surface - structure constraint arguments . After a thorough discussion , T concludes that , with respect to supporting derived vs. underlying ...
... argument ; b . The sibilant - voicing argument ; c . The slow - speech argument ; d . The surface - structure constraint arguments . After a thorough discussion , T concludes that , with respect to supporting derived vs. underlying ...
Seite 660
... argument . Classicists will be disappointed that CR does not bring these restrictions on the object argument into relation with other aspects of the meanings of these verbs . For example , confligere is largely used of unplanned ...
... argument . Classicists will be disappointed that CR does not bring these restrictions on the object argument into relation with other aspects of the meanings of these verbs . For example , confligere is largely used of unplanned ...
Inhalt
Kyriolexia and language change F W Householder | 1 |
Sound change in perception and production Tore Janson | 18 |
Transderivational relationships in Chamorro phonology Sandra Chung | 35 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accent analysis appear apply approach argues argument aspect Assignment Chap claim clitics communication comparative complex consider consonant construction contains context contrast deletion derivation dialect discussion distinction English evidence examples exist expressions fact FIGURE final focus French function German give given grammar historical important indicate interesting interpretation introduced involved issues John language lexical lines linguistic logical marked meaning natural notes noun object occur particular phonetic phonological phrase position possible present Press principles problem production proposed provides question reading reference relative represent rules seems semantic sentences similar situation social sound speakers speech Stage stress structure suggests syllable syntactic syntax Table theory tree University variant verbs volume vowel York